History
Preceding events
In Europe, the origins of the war are closely tied to the
rise of fascism, especially in Nazi Germany. A discussion of how the
Nazis came to power is a requisite in this context.
The origins of the Second World War are generally viewed
as being traced back to the First World War (1914-1918). In that war
Germany under the ultra-nationalistic Kaiser Wilhelm II along with its
allies, had been defeated by a combination of the United Kingdom, United
States, France, Russia and others. The war was directly blamed by the
victors on the militant nationalism of the Kaiser's Germany; it was
Germany that effectively started the war with an attack on France
through Belgium. France, which had suffered a previous defeat at the
hands of Prussia (a state that merged one year later with others to form
Germany) in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, demanded revenge for its
financial devastation during the First World War (and its humiliation in
the earlier war) ensured that the various peace treaties, specifically
the Treaty of Versailles imposed tough financial reparations and
restrictions on Germany.
A new democratic German republic, known as the Weimar
Republic, came into being. After some success it was hit by
hyperinflation and other serious economic problems. Right wing
nationalist elements under a variety of movements, but most notably the
Nazi Party of Adolf Hitler, sought to blame Germany's "humiliating"
status on the harshness of the post-war settlement, on the weakness of
democratic government, and on the Jews, whom it claimed possessed a
financial stranglehold on Germany. Hitler was appointed Reichskanzler
(Chancellor) on January 30, 1933, by the aged President von Hindenburg.
Hitler's government exercised much of its power through the special
emergency powers possessed by the President under the constitution.
These powers enabled a government with the President's
powers to effectively bypass the Reichstag (federal parliament). Under a
further disastrous clause in the Weimar constitution when the President
died, his office was temporarily assumed by the Chancellor. As a result,
when Hindenburg died, the immense powers of the presidency fell into the
hands of Adolf Hitler. Through the possession of those powers and an
Enabling Act that allowed the Nazi government to bypass and ignore the
constitution, Hitler ensured his possession of the presidential powers
became permanent and so gained dictatorial control over Germany.
The Italian economy also fell into a deep slump following
World War I. Anarchists were endemic, Communist and other Socialist
agitators abounded among the trade unions, and many were gravely worried
that a Bolshevik-style Communist revolution was imminent.
After a number of liberal governments failed to rein in
these threats, Italy's King Victor Emmanuel III invited right-wing
politician Benito Mussolini and his Fascist Party to form a government
in 1922, following their largely symbolic Marca su Roma (March on Rome).
The Fascists maintained an armed paramilitary wing, which they employed
to fight Anarchists, Communists, and Socialists.
Within a few years, Mussolini had consolidated
dictatorial power, and Italy became a police state. On January 7, 1935,
he and French Foreign Minister Pierre Laval signed the Italo-French
agreements.
Meanwhile in Germany, once political consolidation
(Gleichschaltung) was in place, the Nazis turned their attention to
foreign policy with several increasingly daring acts.
On March 16, 1935, the Versailles Treaty was violated as
Hitler ordered Germany to re-arm. Germany also reintroduced military
conscription (the treaty stated that the German Army should not exceed
100,000 men).
These steps produced nothing more than official protests
from Britain and France, for they were more serious about enforcing the
economic provisions of the treaty than its military restrictions. Many
Brits felt the restrictions placed on Germany in Versailles had been too
harsh, and they believed that Hitler's aim was simply to undo the
extremes of the treaty, not to go beyond that. Faced with no opposition,
Hitler moved troops into the Rhineland on March 7, 1936. Under the
Versailles treaty, the Rhineland should have been demilitarized, for
France wanted it for a buffer between herself and Germany. But, as
before, Hitler's defiance was met with inaction.
The first German conquest was Austria. After Italy had
joined the Anti-Comintern Pact, thereby removing the main obstacle of a
Anschluss of Austria, Germany announced the annexation on March 12,
1938, making it a German province: "Gau Ostmark."
With Austria secured, Hitler turned his attention to
Czechoslovakia. His first order of business was to seize the
Sudetenland, a mountainous area in northeast part of the country. With
Austria in German hands, the tiny state was nearly surrounded. Following
lengthy negotiations, and blatant war threats from Hitler, British Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain went out of his way with French leaders to
appease Hitler, even though the United Kingdom had earlier guaranteed
the security of Czechoslovakia. However, the Munich Agreement of
September 30, 1938, then allowed German troops to occupy the
Sudetenland.
Czech representatives were not allowed at the conference;
their government strongly opposed giving up the Sudetenland but they
were powerless in the face of German military might and British and
French unwillingness to support them. A few months after that, in March
1939, the remaining Czech lands passed into German hands as well. March
14 Slovakia declared her independence, recognized by France, Britain and
other important powers. The Slovak state tried to avoid nazification,
but was finally occupied by Nazi-Germany in September 1944.
Italy, facing opposition to its wars in Abyssinia
(Ethiopia) from the League of Nations, forged an alliance with Nazi
Germany, which had withdrawn from the League in 1933. In May of 1939,
Italy and Germany thus formed the Pact of Steel, which deepened their
alliance and established a Rome-Berlin "Axis."
Outbreak of War in Europe
Germany and the Soviet Union, the two most powerful
dictatorships in Europe, were sworn enemies, but political realities
allowed them to sign a non-aggression pact (Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact)
including a secret clause partitioning Poland, the Baltic Republics and
Finland between the two.
Full-scale war in Europe began on September 1, 1939, when
Germany invaded Poland, to which both Britain and France had pledged
guarantees (see: Polish September Campaign 1939). On September 17, the
Soviet Union invaded Poland from the east. Poland fell quickly, with her
last large operational units surrendering October 5. However, Polish
troops continued fighting for the Allied until the end of the war.
Dresden After Allied Bombing
Allied bombing of the German city of Dresden later in the
war proved controversial. 85% of the baroque city was destroyed. full
size view of the picture view of the effects from the air.
Despite the quick campaign in the east, along the
Franco-German frontier the war settled into a quiet period. This
relatively non-confrontational period between the major powers lasted
until May 10, 1940, and was known as the Phony War.
Scandinavian Campaigns
Several other countries, however, were drawn into the
conflict at this time. By September 28, 1939, the three Baltic Republics
felt they had no choice but to permit Soviet bases and troops on their
territory.
Finland was invaded by the Soviets on November 30. This
began the Winter War. After over three months of hard fighting, and
heavy losses, the Soviet Union gave up the attempted invasion. In the
Moscow Peace Treaty, March 12, Finland ceded 10% of her territory. The
Finns were embittered over having lost more land in the peace than on
the battle fields, and over the seemingly little use of the whole
world's sympathy.
On April 9 Germany commenced Weserübung to seize Denmark
and Norway, ostensibly as a defensive maneuver against a planned (and
openly discussed) Franco-British occupation of those countries aimed at
controlling export of Swedish iron ore and the Northern Atlantic. After
the failed British campaign in Norway Finland and Sweden were physically
cut off from the West. As a consequence, Germany put pressure on neutral
Sweden to permit transition of military goods and soldiers on leave.
Germany's presence proximate to northernmost Finland, and its Nickel
mines, were perceived as an improvement of the strategical situation by
the Finns.
War Comes to the West
On March 18, 1940, Hitler and Mussolini had agreed to
make the Axis Powers' Pact of Steel an alliance against France and the
United Kingdom.
On May 10 the Phony War ended with a sweeping German
invasion of Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, that bypassed
French fortifications along the Maginot Line.
After overrunning these countries Germany turned against
France, entering the country through the Ardennes on May 13 - the French
had made the fatal mistake of leaving this area almost totally
undefended, believing its terrain to be impassible for tanks. Most
Allied forces were in Flanders, anticipating a re-run of the World War I
Schlieffen Plan, and were cut off from the French heartland. As a result
of this, and also the superior German communications, the Battle of
France was shorter than virtually all prewar Allied thought could have
conceived. It lasted six weeks, after which France surrendered.
In order to further the humiliation of the French people,
Hitler arranged for the surrender document to be signed in the same
railway coach where the German surrender had been signed in 1918. The
fall of France left Britain and its Empire to stand alone. Fortunately
for Britain, much of its army escaped capture from the northern French
port of Dunkirk. The exploits of the "little ships" at Dunkirk were
exploited for propaganda purposes to turn the disastrous defeat into
something approaching a victory in the minds of the British people. In
total, 330,000 troops were pulled off the beaches, of which 230,000 were
British.
The Germans massed their air force in northern France to
prepare the way for a possible invasion, codenamed Operation Seelöwe.
The operations of the Luftwaffe against RAF Fighter Command became know
as the Battle of Britain. It is widely held that the invasion could
never realistically have been mounted successfully. Even had the
Luftwaffe driven the RAF from the skies of southern England, which was
the object of the Battle of Britain for the Germans, there would still
have been the remains of Fighter Command in the Midlands and northern
England, Bomber Command, and Coastal Command, along with the firepower
of the Home Fleet for the Germans to contend with. It is likely that had
the invasion been attempted that German troops would have been landed
and cut off by British sea- and airpower, to be destroyed virtually at
leisure. After the failure to destroy Fighter Command, the Luftwaffe
switched to bombing major British cities. That bombing campaign is
commonly know as the Blitz.
During the Blitz, all of Britain's major industrial cites
were heavily bombed. London suffered particularly, being bombed each
night for several months. Other targets included Birmingham and
Coventry, and strategically important cities, such as the naval base at
Plymouth and the port of Kingston upon Hull.
With no land forces in direct conflict in Europe, the war
in the air attracted worldwide attention even as sea units fought the
Battle of the Atlantic and a number of British commando raids hit
targets in occupied Europe. More critical was the war in the air.
Bomber War
Prewar doctrine had held that waves of bombers hitting
enemy cities would cause mass panic and the rapid collapse of the enemy.
As a result, the Royal Air Force had built up a comparatively large
strategic bomber force. By way of contrast, German air force doctrine
was almost totally dedicated to supporting the army. Therefore, German
bombers were smaller than their British equivalents, and the Germans
never developed a four-engined heavy bomber equivalent to the Lancaster,
B-17 or B-24.
The main concentration of German raids on British cities
was from autumn 1940 until spring 1941. After that a large proportion of
the strength of the Luftwaffe was diverted to the war against the Soviet
Union. German raids continued on a smaller scale for the rest of the
war, and later the V-1 cruise missile and V-2 ballistic missile were
both used against Britain. However, the balance of bomb tonnage being
dropped shifted greatly in favor of the RAF as Bomber Command gained in
strength. By 1942, Bomber Command could put 1,000 bombers over one
German city. However, it should be noted that this was a special effort
using all available aircraft and training units as well. It was 1943
before 1,000 bomber raids became possible without a special effort. From
1942 onwards, the efforts of Bomber Command were supplemented by the
Eighth Air Force of the United States Army Air Force. Bomber Command
raided by night and the US forces by day. During 1943, a raid on Hamburg
produced one of the most devastating fires in history. A firestorm was
created in the city, and 40,000 people were killed. Only the raid on
Dresden in 1945, the firebombing of Tokyo and the atomic bombs killed
more people through a single attack. In addition to the direct damage
caused by these attacks, large amounts of resources were diverted to air
defense.
The Balkans
On October 28 1940, Italy invaded Greece but was unable
to match the German's success in France. Not only did the Italians fail
to conquer Greece, but the Greeks successfully counterattacked into
Albania. This prompted German intervention, which also involved the
invasion of Yugoslavia, where a pro-German coup had been defeated a few
days earlier. British forces were dispatched from Egypt to Greece, but
were comprehensively beaten. After the mainland was conquered, the
Germans invaded Crete. Instead of an amphibious assault as expected, the
Germans mounted a large airborne invasion. It succeeded, but the
paratroops of the German army were so badly mauled in the process that
an airborne operation was never again attempted by Germany during the
war.
Once the Balkans was secure, the largest land operation
in history was launched, when Germany attacked the Soviet Union.
The Eastern Front
On June 22, 1941, the Germans launched a surprise
invasion, code-named Operation Barbarossa, against their erstwhile
Soviet allies. The early weeks of the invasion were devastating for the
Soviet Army. Enormous numbers of Soviet troops were encircled in pockets
and fell into German hands. However, it wasn't only German troops that
went into the Soviet Union. Italian, Hungarian and Romanian troops were
also involved in the campaign.
Out of all the adversaries of the Allies, the situation
of Finland was unique. Finland initially declared neutrality, however
with German and Soviet troops on her soil, and well prepared for
co-belligerence with Germany when the Soviet Union attacked on June 25.
The following conflict from 1941-1944 is referred to as the Continuation
War, i.e. the continuation of the Winter War.
Operation Barbarossa suffered from several fundamental
flaws. The most serious of these was the logistical situation of the
attack. Ultimately it is logistics that determine what a military can
do. The sheer vastness of the distances in the Soviet Union meant that
the Germans could only advance so far before outrunning their supply
chains. By the time the German attack froze to a halt before Moscow on
December 5, 1941, it literally could not go any further. There simply
were not enough supplies reaching the front to conduct proper defensive
operations, let alone a proper offense. The timetable that Barbarossa
was planned to assumed that the Soviets would collapse before the
Russian winter hit. The failure of that to happen also fatally affected
German plans.
During their long retreat, the Soviets employed a
scorched earth policy. They burnt crops and destroyed utilities as they
withdrew before the Germans. That helped to contribute to the logistical
problems that the Germans experienced. The extension of the campaign
beyond the length that the Germans expected meant that the German Army
suffered hundreds of thousands of casualties in the bitter cold of the
Russian winter, and from the counterattacks of Soviet units.
Even with their advance having ground to a halt due to a
lack of supplies and the onset of winter, the Germans had conquered a
vast amount of territory. Dislodging them cost the Soviet Union dearly
and took until late 1944.
Once the Germans had conquered so much of the Soviet
Union, one of the great tragedies of the war began, the siege of
Leningrad: Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) was reached fairly quickly,
from the North by Finnish forces, and from the South by the German
Wehrmacht. Finland's C-in-C Mannerheim had halted at the River Svir and
refrained from attacking the city.
Hitler had ordered that the city of Leningrad must
"vanish from the surface of the earth", with its entire population
exterminated. Rather than storming the city, the Wehrmacht was ordered
to blockade Leningrad so as to starve the city to death, while attacking
it with bombers and artillery. About one million civilians died in the
Leningrad siege - 800,000 by starvation. It lasted 900 days, and at its
height the only way into the city was across Lake Ladoga, between the
German and Finnish lines.
After enduring the winter of 1941/42, the German army
prepared for further offensive operations. Instead of trying to reach
Moscow, the objective was changed to Stalingrad (now Volgograd) near the
Caucasus region of Russia. Stalingrad was captured, however the course
of the campaign took a turn for the worse due to disparate objectives,
and a lack of focus.
Indecision by Hitler, dissent among the higher ranked
German officers, and extended supply lines combined in a prolonged
battle in the streets of Stalingrad. In an attempt to capture the city,
almost all Germans in the area were funneled into the city leaving only
weak Romanian and Hungarian forces on the flanks of the salient. After a
Soviet counteroffensive destroyed these forces, the German 6th Army was
cut off in the city itself, along with part of the 4th Panzer Army.
Starved of food, fuel and ammunition, the pocket was gradually reduced,
with the last portion surrendering in early 1943. In a cynical attempt
to prevent the surrender, Hitler promoted the commander of 6th Army to
Field Marshal, because no German of that rank had ever surrendered.
Heavy losses affected both sides in the Battle of Stalingrad, one of the
bloodiest battles in history. An estimated 2 million people perished in
this battle, including 500,000 civilians.
After Stalingrad, the initiative had passed from the
Germans but had not yet been seized by the Soviets. A desperate
counterattack in the spring of 1943 by the forces of von Manstein halted
the Soviet advance for the moment, and set up the largest tank battle in
history, Kursk. Kursk was the last major offensive by the Germany Army
on the eastern front. The Soviets had intelligence of what was to come
and prepared massive defenses in huge depth in the Kursk salient. They
stopped the German armored thrusts after a maximum penetration of 17
miles. After Kursk the Red Army never ceased being on the offensive
until Berlin was captured in May 1945.
The Soviets bore the brunt of World War II; the second
front in Europe did not begin until D-Day, apart from the invasion of
Italy. More Soviet citizens died during World War II than those of all
other countries combined. Approximately 27 million Soviets, among them
more than 13 million civilians, were killed in the German invasion of
the Soviet Union. Civilians were rounded up and burned or shot in many
cities conquered by the Nazis. Since the Nazis considered Slavs to be
"subhuman", this was ethnically targeted mass murder.
It would be wrong however to say the Soviets fought
alone. Supply convoys sailed to Soviet ports at great risk. Allied
activities may have tied up only a few divisions in actual fighting, but
many more were forced to guard lonely coasts against raids that never
came or to man antiaircraft guns throughout Europe. It should also be
mentioned that the Soviets took virtually no part in the great naval
campaigns of the war, had a very limited effect on the strategic bombing
offensive, and contributed very little to the defeat of Japan.
North Africa
The north African campaign began in 1940, when small
British forces in Egypt turned back an Italian advance from Libya. This
advance was stopped in 1941 when German forces under Erwin Rommel landed
in Libya. Thus began a seesaw campaign that culminated in the two
Battles of El Alamein. The first battle took place in summer 1942. The
Germans had advanced to El Alamein, the last defensible point before
Alexandria and the Suez Canal. However, as in the Soviet Union, they had
outrun their supplies, and a British defense stopped their thrusts.
The later of the two battles, in the late autumn saw
British forces take the offensive. Rommel was pushed back, and this time
did not stop falling back until Tunisia.
To complement this victory, on 8 November, 1942, American
and British troops landed in Morocco and Algeria in Operation Torch.
Vichy French forces put up limited resistance before joining the Allied
cause. Ultimately German and Italian forces were caught in the pincers
of a twin advance from Algeria and Libya. Advancing from both the east
and west, the Allies completely pushed the Germans out of Africa and on
May 13, 1943, the remnants of the Axis forces in North Africa
surrendered. Not widely known is that the number of prisoners taken in
this incident, 250,000 was as many as at Stalingrad.
The Allies' Invasion of Italy
With the North African shore acting as a springboard, an
Allied blow into what Churchill referred to as the 'soft underbelly' of
Europe was inevitable.
A prelude of this attack was the capture of the offshore
island of Sicily on 10 July, 1943. This took the wind out of the
bombastic Mussolini. He was deposed on July 25, 1943, by the Fascist
Grand Council.
He was arrested and placed under house arrest in an
isolated mountain resort. His replacement, General Pietro Badoglio,
negotiated an armistice with the Allies on September 8, 1943.
The Germans moved quickly into the confused situation,
disarmed Italian formations and established strong defensive lines.
Allied troops landed in mainland Italy on September 9,
1943; the American at Salerno, the British at Taranto.
Mussolini was rescued by the Germans and installed as the
head of a Nazi puppet state in northern Italy. He continued in this role
until he was captured and lynched by mobs on April 28, 1945, as the
Allied forces closed in on Milan.
The Germans had built a fortified zone in the mountains
called the Gustav line. The Allied forces attacked both sides of the
line, attacking Monte Cassino from the south and landing at Anzio in the
north.
The Allies finally entered Rome on June 4, 1944, two days
before the landings in Normandy. The Germans regrouped at the Gothic
Line further north. After a landing in southern France in August to
threaten the German flank, British forces started the attack on the line
September 10. The offensive by Allied and some Italian forces continued
until the Germans surrendered in Italy on April 29, two days after
Mussolini's capture.
The Allies' Invasion of France
Essentially simultaneously with the fall of Rome came the
long-awaited invasion of France. Operation Neptune put troops ashore in
Normandy on June 6 1944. A long grinding campaign two months long
followed as American, British and Canadian forces were slowly built up
in the bridgehead, and German forces slowly worn down. When the breakout
finally did come it was spectacular, with American forces under Patton
racing across France to the German border. The German forces that had
been fighting in Normandy were trapped in a pocket around Falaise.
General Charles deGaulle
Leader of the Free French in opposition to Petáin's Vichy
regime. Incessant bombing of Germany's infrastructure and cities caused
tremendous casualties and disruption. Internally, Hitler survived a
number of assassination attempts. The most serious was the July 20 Plot,
in which Hitler was slightly injured.
Operation Neptune was complemented by an invasion of
southern France in August codenamed Operation Dragoon - the combined
operation was referred to as Operation Overlord. By September, three
Allied Army Groups were in line against German formations in the west.
There was optimism that the war in Europe might be over by the end of
1944.
An attempt was made to force the situation with Operation
Market Garden. The Allies attempted to capture bridges with an airborne
assault, to open the way into Germany and liberate the northern
Netherlands. Unfortunately, heavier German forces than intelligence had
predicted were present. The British 1st Airborne Division was almost
completely destroyed.
The cold winter of 1944 combined with a poor situation
for the Allies led to a stagnate situation on the western front. The
Americans continued to grind away at the defenders in the Battle of
Hurtgen Forest. As long as they stayed on the defense, the Allies were
hard-pressed to advance rapidly.
That changed when the Germans mounted a major
counteroffensive on Dec 16, 1944. The Ardennes offensive, also called
the Battle of the Bulge, drove back and surrounded some American units.
The Allied forces were eventually successful in driving back the
Germans, in what turned out to be their last major advance of the war.
The final obstacle to the Allies was the River Rhine. It
was crossed in April 1945, and the way lay open to the heart of Germany.
The last German forces in the west were encircled in the Ruhr.
The End of the War in Europe
On April 25, 1945 United States and Russian troops
linked-up at the Elbe River, cutting Germany in two.
The Holocaust
Thousands of Holocaust victims arriving at the Nazi
extermination camp at Birkenau in 1944
When all was lost, Hitler committed suicide in his bunker
along with his lover, Eva Braun. The German Empire was partitioned by
the Allies into an area of Soviet control, which became East Germany,
and an area of joint British/French/American control, which became West
Germany. The final surrender documents were signed by General Alfred
Jodl on May 7, 1945. May 8 was declared V-E (Victory In Europe) Day.
Following the war, Allied soldiers discovered a number of
concentration camps and other locations that had been used by the Nazis
to imprison and exterminate an estimated 12 million people. The largest
single group represented in this number were Jewish (roughly half the
total according to the Nuremburg trials), but Gypsies, Slavs, Catholics,
homosexuals and various minorities and disabled persons formed the
remainder. The most well-known of these camps is the death camp
Auschwitz in which about two million prisoners were killed. Although the
Nazi genocide or "Holocaust" was largely unknown to the Allied soldiers
fighting the war, it has become an inseparable part of the story of
World War II.
The Pacific Theater
Preceding Events
In the Pacific, war was not formally declared between the
belligerents until after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on December
7, 1941. (See: Greater East Asia War). However, there was active
fighting dating back to the 1930s, the cause of which can be seen in the
political fragmentation and weakness of China combined with a strong
Japan with a militaristic and expansionist ideology.
In the 1920s, China fragmented into warlordism in which
there was a weak central government, and Japan was able gain influence
in China by imposing unequal treaties with what remained of the central
government. This situation was unstable in that if China dissolved into
total anarchy these agreements would be unenforceable while if China was
able to strength, the strong China would be able to abrogate those
agreements.
In 1927, Chiang Kai-Shek and the National Revolutionary
Army of the Kuomintang led the Northern Expedition. Chiang was able to
militarily defeat the warlords in southern and central China, and was in
the process of securing the nominal allegiance of the warlords in
northern China. Fearing that Zhang Xueliang (the warlord controlling
Manchuria) was about to declare his allegiance for Chiang, the Japanese
intervened and set up the puppet state of Manchukuo.
There is no evidence that Japan ever intended to directly
administer China or that Japan's actions in China were part of a program
of world domination. Rather, Japan's goals in China were strongly
influenced by 19th century European colonialism and were to maintain a
secure supply of natural resources and to have friendly and pliable
governments in China that would not act against Japanese interests.
Although Japanese actions would not have seemed out of
place among European colonial powers in the 19th century, by 1930,
notions of Wilsonian self-determination meant that raw military force in
support of colonialism was no longer seen as appropriate behavior by the
international community. Japanese actions were therefore roundly
criticized and led to Japan's withdrawal from the League of Nations.
During the 1930s, China and Japan reached a stalemate with Chiang
focusing his efforts at eliminating the Communists whom Chiang
considered to be a more fundamental danger than the Japanese. The
influence of Chinese nationalism on opinion both in the political elite
and the general population rendered this strategy increasingly
untenable.
Meanwhile in Japan, a policy of assassination by secret
societies and the effects of the Great Depression had caused the
civilian government to lose control of the military. In addition, the
military high command had limited control over the field armies who
acted on their own interest, often in contradiction to the overall
national interest. There was also an upsurge in nationalism and
anti-European feeling and the belief that Japanese policies in China
could be justified by racial theories. One popular belief with
similarities to the Identity movement was that Japan and not China was
the true heir of classical Chinese civilization.
In 1937, Chiang was kidnapped by Zhang Xueliang in the
Xian Incident. As condition of his release, Chiang promised to united
with the Communists and fight the Japanese. In response to this,
officers of the Kwangtung Army without knowledge of the high command in
Tokyo decided to manufacture the Battle of Lugou Bridge, also known as
the incident at the Marco Polo Bridge, by which they succeeded in their
intention of provoking a conflict between the Republic of China and the
Empire of Japan, the Sino-Japanese War).
In 1939 Japanese forces tried to push into the Soviet far
east from Manchuria. They were soundly defeated by a mixed Soviet and
Mongolian force led by Georgi Zhukov. This stopped Japanese expansion to
the North and Japan and the Soviet Union kept un uneasy peace until
1945.
Japan's policies in the 1930s are remarkable for their
disastrously self-defeating nature. Japan's grand strategy was based on
the premise that it could not survive a war against the European powers
without secure sources of natural resources, yet to secure those
resources it decided to undertake the war that it knew it could not win
in the first place. Moreover actions such as its brutality in China, and
its practice of first setting up, and then undermining, puppet
governments in China were clearly antithetical to Japan's overall goals,
and yet it continued to persist in them anyway. Finally, this march to
self-destruction is remarkable in that many individuals within the
Japanese political and military elite realized these self-destructive
consequences, but were unable to do anything about the situation. Also,
there appears to have been no debate over policy alternatives which
might have enabled Japan to further its goals in China.
Outbreak of War in the East
By 1941, Japan had occupied much of north and central
China. However, Japan was faced with continued opposition from both the
Kuomintang and the Communist Party of China. Although Japan was deeply
mired in a quagmire, it did not undertake or even consider undertaking
policies which would help it resolve the situation. Although it created
several puppet governments, its policies of brutality toward the Chinese
population, of not yielding any real power to the governments, and of
support to several competing governments failed to make any of them a
popular alternative to Chiang government. Japan was also unwilling to
negotiate directly with Chiang, nor was it willing to attempt to create
splits in united front against it, by offering concessions that would
make it a more attractive alternative than Chiang's government. Instead,
Japan's reaction to its situation was to turn to increasingly more
brutal and depraved actions in the hope that sheer terror would break
the will of the Chinese population.
This, however, only had the effect of turning world
public opinion against it. In an effort to discourage Japan's war
efforts in China, the United States, United Kingdom, and the government
in exile of the Netherlands (still in control of the oil-rich Dutch East
Indies) stopped trading oil and steel (both war staples) with Japan.
Japan saw this as an act of aggression, as without these resources
Japan's military machine would grind to a halt, and on December 7, 1941,
Japanese forces invaded Siam, Malaya, and the Philippines, and attacked
the American fleet at Pearl Harbor. Faced with this situation and with
the belief that Although Japan knew that it could not win a sustained
and prolonged war against the United States, it was the Japanese hope
that, faced with this sudden and massive defeat, the United States would
agree to a negotiated settlement that would allow Japan to have free
reign in China. They were incorrect, and Japan was faced with a war it
knew it could not win.
Four days later, Germany declared war on the United
States, drawing America into a two-theater war. Until then, America had
remained out of the conflict, though it was providing military aid to
Britain and Soviet Union through the Lend-Lease program.
Allied forces in Asia, drained of men and materiel by the
European conflict, were unable to provide much more than token
resistance to the battle-hardened Japanese. Major units of the British
fleet were sunk off Malaya on 10th December, and Hong Kong fell on the
25th. United States bases on Guam and Wake Island were lost at around
the same time. January saw the invasions of Burma, the Solomons, the
Dutch East Indies and New Guinea, and the capture of Manila, Kuala
Lumpur and Rabaul. The pace of conquest was rapid: Bali and Timor fell
in February 1942, Rangoon and Java in March, and Mandalay at the
beginning of May. Meanwhile, Japanese aircraft had all but eliminated
British and American air power in South-East Asia, made major raids on
northern Australia, and driven the British fleet out of Ceylon.
Allied resistance, at first shambolic, gradually began to
stiffen. The Doolittle Raid in April was a token but morale-boosting air
attack on Japan, and although the US Navy was narrowly defeated in
tactical terms at the Battle of the Coral Sea, it still managed to
derail the Japanese plan to invade Port Moresby. The crucial Battle of
Midway followed in June: the fortunes of war could easily have given
either side the victory, but Japanese naval aviation suffered a
devastating defeat from which it never recovered. Midway was the
turning-point of the naval war in the Pacific theatre.
On land, the British/Indian retreat in Burma had slowed,
Australian forces in New Guinea successfully defended Port Moresby along
the Kokada Track and in August Japanese land forces suffered their first
outright defeat of the war at the Battle of Milne Bay. At the same time,
US and Japanese soldiers both attempted to occupy the island of
Guadalcanal. Forces converged on Guadalcanal over the following six
months in an escalating battle of attrition, with eventual victory going
to the United States. From this time on the Japanese fought a defensive
war.
The constant need to reinforce Guadalcanal weakened the
Japanese effort in other theatres, leading to the recapture of Buna/Gona
by Australian and US forces in early 1943, and preparing the way for
both MacArthur's land-based thrust through New Guinea and Nimitz's
island hopping campaign across the Pacific.
Hard-fought battles at Tarawa, Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and
others resulted in horrific casualties on both sides, but finally
produced a Japanese retreat. Faced with the loss of most of their
experienced pilots, the Japanese resorted to kamikaze tactics in an
attempt to slow the U.S. advance. On February 3, 1945, Japan's longtime
enemy Russia agreed to enter the Pacific Theatre conflict against Japan
and was soon making advances in Japanese-occupied Manchuria. Meanwhile,
Tokyo and other Japanese cities suffered greatly from attacks by
American bombers. Japan finally surrendered after the cities Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, both industrial and civilian targets, were destroyed by
nuclear weapons.
The final surrender was signed September 2, 1945, on the
battleship Missouri. Following this period, General Douglas MacArthur
established bases in Japan to oversee the postwar development of the
country. This period in Japanese history is known as the occupation.
President Harry Truman officially proclaimed an end of hostilities in on
December 31, 1946.
Historical Significance
Most likely learning from the example of World War I, the
Western victors in the Second World War did not demand compensation from
the defeated nations. On the contrary, a plan created by U. S. Secretary
of State George Marshall, the "Economic Recovery Program", better known
as the Marshall Plan, called for the US Congress to allocate billions of
dollars for the reconstruction of Europe.
The portion of Europe occupied or dominated by the Soviet
Union did not participate in the plan. In the Paris Peace Treaty
Soviet's enemies Hungary, Finland and Rumania were required to pay war
reparations on $300,000,000 each (in 1938 year's value) to USSR and her
satellites. Also Italy paid $360,000,000, shared chiefly between Greece,
Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.
As mentioned, the Soviets bore the heaviest casualties of
World War II. This may explain much of Russia's behavior after the war.
The Soviet Union continued to occupy and dominate Eastern Europe as a
"buffer zone" against another invasion from the West. Russia had been
invaded three times in the 150 years before the Cold War: during the
Napoleonic Wars, World War I, and World War II, suffering tens of
millions of causalities.
At the same time, the United States and the Soviet Union
consolidated their military presence and links in Europe as preparation
against possible aggression. In Churchill' words, an Iron Curtain had
descended across Europe and a new phase of the conflict between the
democracies and Soviet Union, the Cold War began.
The massive research and development involved in the
Manhattan Project in order to quickly achieve a working nuclear weapon
design greatly impacted the scientific community, among other things
creating a network of national laboratories in the United States.
In the military sphere, it seems World War II marked the
coming of age of airpower, mostly at the expense of warships. While the
pendulum continues to swing in this never-ending competition air powers
are now a full partner in any military action.
The war was the high-water mark for mass armies. While
huge armies of low-quality troops would be seen again (during the Korean
War and in a number of African conflicts) after this victory the major
powers relied upon small highly-trained and well-trained militaries.
After the war, many high-ranking Nazis and Japanese
leaders were prosecuted for war crimes, as well as the mass murder of
the Holocaust. See Nuremberg trials.
World War II Battles
The World Book Encyclopedia begins its discussion of
World War II with the following words: "World War II (1939-1945) killed
more people, destroyed more property, disrupted more lives, and probably
had more far reaching effects than any other war in history."
Below are some of the most famous battles of World War
II.
World War II Holocaust
The word 'Holocaust', from the Greek word
'holokauston' meaning "a burnt sacrifice offered to God",
originally referred to a sacrifice Jews were required to make by the
Torah, and later to large scale catastrophes or massacres. Due to the
theological meaning that this word carries, many Jews find the use of
this word problematic, as it could imply that Jews were a sacrifice.
Instead of holocaust many Jews prefer the Hebrew word Shoah, which means
"desolation".
While nowadays the term 'Holocaust' usually refers to the
above-mentioned large-scale killings of Jews, it is also sometimes used
to refer to other occurrences of genocide, especially the Armenian and
Hellenic Holocausts, the murder of about 2.5 million Christians by the
Young Turk government between 1915 and 1923.
However, the Turkish government officially denies that
there was any genocide, claiming that most of the deaths resulted from
armed conflict, disease and famine during the turmoil of World War I,
despite the fact that most casualties occurred in villages far from the
battlefield and that there is historical proof this was a systematic
attempt to wipe out all non-Muslims.
In some circles, the term holocaust is used to describe
the systematic murder of the other groups which were exterminated in the
same circumstances by the Nazis, including ethnic Roma and Sinti (also
known as Gypsies), political dissidents, communists, homosexuals, mental
patients, Jehovah's Witnesses, Russians, Poles, and other Slavs, raising
the total number of victims of Nazis to between ten and fourteen million
civilians, and up to 4 million POWs.
Today, the term is also used to describe other attempts
at genocide, both before and after World War II, or more generally, for
any overwhelmingly massive deliberate loss of life, such as that which
would result from nuclear war, hence the phrase "Nuclear Holocaust".
Shoa, also spelled Shoah and Sho'ah, Hebrew for
"Destruction", is the Hebrew term for the Holocaust. It is used by many
Jews and a growing number of Christians due to theological discomfort
with the literal meaning of the word Holocaust; it is considered
theologically offensive to imply that the Jews of Europe were a
sacrifice to God.
It is nonetheless recognized that most people who use the
term Holocaust do not intend such a meaning. Similarly, many Roma
(Gypsy) people use the word Porajmos, meaning "Devouring" to describe
the Nazi attempt to exterminate that group.
One feature of the Nazi Holocaust that distinguishes it
from other mass murders was the systematic method with which the mass
killings were conducted. Detailed lists of present, and future,
potential victims were made and meticulous records of the killings have
been found.
In addition, considerable effort was expended over the
course of the Holocaust to find increasingly efficient means of killing
more people, for example, by switching from carbon monoxide poisoning in
the Aktion Reinhard death camps of Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka to the use
of Zyklon-B at Majdanek and Auschwitz; gas vans using carbon monoxide
for mass killings were used in the Chelmno death camp.
In addition to mass killings, Nazis conducted many
experiments with prisoners, children inclusive. Dr. Josef Mengele, one
of the most widely known Nazis, was known as the "Angel of Death" by the
inmates of Auschwitz, for his experiments.
The full extent of what was happening in
German-controlled areas was not known until after the war. However,
numerous rumors and eye-witness accounts from escapees and others did
give some indication that Jews were being killed in large numbers. Some
protests were held. For example on October 29, 1942 in the United
Kingdom, leading clergymen and political figures held a public meeting
to register outrage over Germany's persecution of Jews.
Concentration and Extermination Camps
Concentration camps for, "undesirables," were spread
throughout Europe, with new camps being created near centers of dense
"undesirable" populations, often focusing on heavily Jewish, Polish
intelligentsia, communists, or Roma groups. Most of the camps were
located on the area of General Government.
Concentration camps for Jews and other, "undesirables,"
also existed in Germany itself, and while not specifically designed for
systematic extermination, many concentration camp prisoners died because
of harsh conditions or were executed.
Some camps, such as Auschwitz-Birkenau, combined slave
labor with systematic extermination. Upon arrival in these camps,
prisoners were divided into two groups: those too weak for work were
immediately murdered in gas chambers (which were sometimes disguised as
showers) and their bodies burned, while others were first used for slave
labor in factories or industrial enterprises located in the camp or
nearby.
The Nazis also forced some prisoners to work in the
removal of the corpses and to harvest elements of the bodies. Gold teeth
were extracted from the corpses and women's hair (shaved from the heads
of victims before they entered the gas chambers) was recycled for use in
products such as rugs and socks.
Three camps--Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka II--were used
exclusively for extermination. Only a small number of prisoners were
kept alive to work at the task of disposing of the bodies of people
murdered in the gas chambers.
The transport was often carried out under horrifying
conditions using rail freight cars.
Jews
Anti-Semitism was common in Europe in the 1920s and 1930s
(though its history extends far back throughout many centuries during
the course of Judaism). Adolf Hitler's fanatical anti-Semitism was laid
out in his 1925 book Mein Kampf, which became popular in Germany once he
acquired political power. On April 1, 1933 the recently elected Nazis
under Julius Streicher organized a one-day boycott of all Jewish-owned
businesses in Germany (the last remaining Jewish enterprises in Germany
were closed on July 6, 1939). This policy helped to usher-in a series of
anti-Semitic acts that would eventually culminate in the Jewish
Holocaust.
In many cities throughout Europe, Jews had been living in
concentrated areas. During the first years of World War II, the Nazis
formalized the borders of these areas and restricted movement, creating
modern ghettos to which Jews were confined. The ghettos were, in effect,
prisons, in which many Jews died from hunger and disease; others were
executed by the Nazis and their collaborators.
Concentration camps for Jews existed in Germany itself.
During the invasion of the Soviet Union over 3,000 special killing units
(Einsatzgruppen) followed the Armed Forces and conducted mass killings
of the Jewish population that lived on Soviet territory. Entire
communities were wiped out by being rounded up, robbed of their
possessions and clothing, and shot at the edges of ditches.
In December of 1941 Hitler has finally decided to
exterminate the Jews of Europe. In January of 1942, during the Wannsee
conference, several Nazi leaders discussed the details of the "final
solution of the Jewish question" (Endlösung der Judenfrage).
Dr. Josef Buhler pushed Heydrich to take off the final
solution in the General Government. They began to systematically deport
the Jewish populations of the ghettos and from all occupied territories
to extermination camps, such as Auschwitz and Treblinka II.
Homosexuals
Homosexuals were another of the groups targeted during
the time of the Holocaust. However, the Nazi party made no attempt to
exterminate all homosexuals; according to Nazi law, being homosexual
itself was not grounds for arrest. Some prominent members of the Nazi
leadership were known to other Nazi leaders to be homosexual, which may
account for the fact that the leadership offered mixed signals on how to
deal with homosexuals. Some leaders clearly wanted homosexuals
exterminated; others wanted them left alone, while others wanted laws
against homosexual acts enforced, but otherwise allowed homosexuals to
live as other citizens did.
Estimates vary wildly as to the number of homosexuals
killed. They range from as low as 10,000 to as high as 600,000. The
large variance is partly dependent on how researchers tally those who
were Jewish and homosexual, or even Jewish, homosexual and communist. In
addition, records as to the reasons for internment remain non-existent
in many areas. See Homosexuals in Nazi Germany for more information.
Gypsies
Hitler's campaign of genocide against the Roma people of
Europe was seen by many as a particularly bizarre application of Nazi
racial science. German anthropologists were forced to contend with the
fact that Gypsies were descendants of the original Aryan invaders of
India, who made their way back to Europe. Ironically, this made them no
less Aryan than the German people itself, in practice if not in theory.
This dilemma was resolved by Professor Hans Gunther, a leading racial
scientist, who wrote:
"The Gypsies have indeed retained some elements from
their Nordic home, but they are descended from the lowest classes of the
population in that region. In the course of their migration, they
absorbed the blood of the surrounding peoples, thus becoming an
Oriental, West-Asiatic racial mixture with an addition of Indian,
mid-Asiatic, and European strains."
As a result, however, and despite discriminatory
measures, some groups of Roma, including the Sinti and Lalleri tribes of
Germany, were spared deportation and death. Remaining Gypsy groups
suffered much like the Jews (and in some instances, were degraded even
more than Jews). In Eastern Europe, Gypsies were deported to the Jewish
ghettoes, shot by SS Einsatzgruppen in their villages, and deported and
gassed in Auschwitz and Treblinka.
Others
Slavic people were targeted by the Nazis, mostly
intellectuals and prominent people, although there were some mass
murders and instances of genocide (Croatian Ustashe as the most
notorious example).
During Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the
Soviet Union 1941-1944, hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of
Russian army POWs were arbitrarily executed in the field by the invading
German armies, in particular by the notorious Waffen S.S., or were
shipped to the many extermination camps for execution simply because
they were of Slavic extraction. Thousands of Russian peasant villages
were annihilated by German troops for more or less the same reason.
Around 2000 Jehovah's Witnesses perished in concentration
camps, where they were held for political and ideological reasons, as
they refused involvement in politics, would not say "Heil Hitler" and
did not serve in the German army. - See Jehovah's Witnesses and the
Holocaust.
On August 18, 1941, Adolf Hitler ordered an end to the
systematic euthanasia of mentally ill and handicapped people due to
protests within Germany.
Extent of the Holocaust
The exact number of people killed by the Nazi regime is
still subject to further research. Recently declassified British and
Soviet documents have indicated the total may be somewhat higher than
previously believed. However, the following estimates are considered to
be highly reliable.
-
5.6–6.1 million Jews
-
3.5–6 million Slavic civilians
-
2.5–4 million POWs
-
1–1.5 million political dissidents
-
200 000–800 000 Roma & Sinti
-
200 000–300 000 handicapped
-
10 000–250 000 homosexuals
-
2 000 Jehovah's Witnesses
The Triangles
To identify prisoners in the camps according to their
"offense", they were required to wear colored triangles on their
clothing. Although the colors used differed from camp to camp, the
colors most commonly were:
-
Yellow: Jews -- two overlaid to form a Star of David,
with the word "Jude" (Jew) inscribed
-
Red: political dissidents, including communists
-
Green: common criminals
-
Purple: Jehovah's Witnesses
-
Blue: immigrants
-
Brown: Roma and Sinti (Gypsies)
-
Black: Lesbians and "anti-socials"
-
Pink: Gay men
Historical Interpretations
As with any historical event, scholars continue to argue
over what, exactly, happened, and why. Among the major questions
historians have sought to answer are:
-
how many people were killed in the Holocaust?
-
who was directly involved in the killing?
-
who authorized the killing?
-
who knew about the killing?
-
why did people directly participate in, authorize, or
tacitly accept the killing?
Functionalism Versus Intentionalism
A major issue in contemporary Holocaust studies is the
question of functionalism versus intentionalism. Intentionalists argue
that the Holocaust was planned by Hitler from the very beginning.
Functionalists hold that the Holocaust was started in 1942 as a result
of the failure of the Nazi deportation policy and the impending military
losses in Russia. They claim that extermination fantasies outlined in
Hitler's Mein Kampf and other Nazi literature were mere propaganda and
did not constitute concrete plans.
Another controversy was started by the historian Daniel
Goldhagen, who argues that ordinary Germans were knowing and willing
participants in the Holocaust, which he claims had its roots in a deep
eliminative German anti-Semitism. Others claim that while anti-Semitism
undeniably existed in Germany, the extermination was unknown to many and
had to be enforced by the dictatorial Nazi apparatus.
Revisionists and Deniers
Some groups, commonly referred to as "Holocaust deniers",
deny that the Holocaust happened. Many of the Holocaust deniers are
neo-Nazis or just anti-Semites.
Holocaust revisionism claims that far fewer than 5-6
million Jews were killed, and that the killing was not a result of
deliberate Nazi policy. Although Holocaust revisionists claim to present
documentary evidence to support their claims, critics argue that the
evidence is flawed, the research is specious, and the conclusions are
pre-determined. Many claim that such revisionism is a form of
Anti-Semitism and tantamount to denial.
Political Ramifications
The Holocaust has had a number of political and social
ramifications which reach to the present. The need to find a homeland
for many Jewish refugees led to a great many Jews emigrating to
Palestine, most of which was soon to become the modern State of Israel.
This immigration had a direct effect on the Arabs of the region, which
is discussed in the articles on the Arab-Israeli conflict, the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and in many articles linked to these.
World War II Statistics
World War II Death Count Per Country
Here we've compiled a comprehensive collection of World
War 2 Statistics. Please note that these figures are approximate.
Individual sources of statistics sometimes vary.
|
Country |
Military |
Civilian |
Total |
|
USSR |
12 million |
17 million |
29 million |
|
Poland |
597,000 |
5.86 million |
6.27 million |
|
Germany |
3.25 million |
2.44 million |
5.69 million |
|
Yugoslavia |
305,000 |
1.35 million |
1.66 million |
|
Romania |
450,000 |
465,000 |
915,000 |
|
Hungary |
200,000 |
600,000 |
800,000 |
|
France |
245,000 |
350,000 |
595,000 |
|
Italy |
380,000 |
153,000 |
533,000 |
|
Great Britain |
403,000 |
92,700 |
495,000 |
|
United States |
407,000 |
6,000 |
413,000 |
|
Czechoslovakia |
7,000 |
315,000 |
322,000 |
|
Holland |
13,700 |
236,000 |
249,000 |
|
Greece |
19,000 |
140,000 |
159,000 |
|
Belgium |
76,000 |
23,000 |
99,000 |
Death Distribution Of Both World Wars
|
War |
Military Dead |
Civilian Dead |
|
World War I |
95% |
5% |
|
World War II |
33% |
67% |
World War II Quotes
-
We no longer demand anything, we want war. -
Germany's foreign minister, August 1939.
-
Air superiority is a condition for all operations, at
sea, in land, and in the air. - Air Marshal Arthur Tedder.
-
Among the men who fought on Iwo Jima, uncommon valor
was a common virtue. - Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz (March 16,
1945)
-
No other island received as much preliminary pounding
as did Iwo Jima. - Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Commander in Chief of
the Pacific Fleet
-
The raising of that flag on Suribachi means a Marine
Corps for the next 500 years. - James Forrestal, Secretary of the
Navy (February 23, 1945)
-
Sure, we want to go home. We want this war over with.
The quickest way to get it over with is to go get the bastards who
started it. The quicker they are whipped, the quicker we can go
home. The shortest way home is through Berlin and Tokyo. And when we
get to Berlin, I am personally going to shoot that paper hanging
son-of-a-bitch Hitler. Just like I'd shoot a snake! - General George
S. Patton, Jr. (addressing to his troops before Operation Overlord,
June 5, 1944)
-
We shall defend our island whatever the cost may be.
We shall fight on beaches, landing grounds, in fields, in streets
and on the hills. We shall never surrender. - Winston Churchill.
-
The world must know what happened, and never forget.
- General Eisenhower, while visiting Nazi death camps, 1945.
-
History knows no greater display of courage than that
shown by the people of the Soviet Union. - Henry Stimson.
-
Among the men who fought on Iwo Jima, uncommon valor
was a common virtue - Admiral Nimitz.
-
I believe it is peace in our time.- Neville
Chamberlain, 1938
-
Today we rule Germany, tomorrow, the world. - Adolf
Hitler
-
I am asking of no man more than I myself was ready
throughout four years to do - Adolf Hitler
-
I know not with what weapons World War III will be
fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.
-Albert Einstein
-
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed
by so many to so few. - Winston Churchill, about R.A.F fighter
pilots.
-
We want to get the hell over there. The quicker we
clean up this Goddamned mess, the quicker we can take a little jaunt
against the purple pissing Japs and clean out their nest, too.
Before the Goddamned Marines get all of the credit. - General George
S. Patton, Jr. (addressing his troops prior to Operation Overlord,
June 5, 1944)
-
I shall return. - General Douglas Macarthur, Supreme
Allied Commander of South-West Pacific (speaking about the
Philippines, when he was forced to retreat to Australia, 1942)
-
History - in every century, records an act that lives
forevermore. We'll recall - as in to line we fall, the thing that
happened on Hawaii's shore.
-
United in this determination and with unshakable
faith in the cause for which we fight, we will, with God's help, go
forward to our greatest victory. - General Dwight D. Eisenhower
(1944)
-
They (Women Marines) don't have a nickname, and they
don't need one. They get their basic training in a Marine
atmosphere, at a Marine Post. They inherit the traditions of the
Marines. They are Marines. - Lieutenant General Thomas Holcomb
(1943)
-
I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears and
sweat. - Winston Churchill.
-
The gallantry and aggressive fighting spirit of the
Russian soldiers command the American army's admiration. - George C.
Marshall, Chief of Staff, U.S. Army
-
The scale and grandeur of the Russian effort mark it
as the greatest military achievement in all history. - General
Douglas Macarthur, Supreme Allied Commander of South-West Pacific
-
Goddam it, you'll never get the Purple Heart hiding
in a foxhole! Follow me! - Captain Henry P. Jim Crowe (Guadalcanal,
January 13, 1943)
-
Casualties many; Percentage of dead not known; Combat
efficiency; we are winning. - Colonel David M. Shoup (Tarawa,
November 21, 1943)
-
The atom bomb was no great decision... It was merely another
powerful weapon in the arsenal of righteousness. -President Harry
Truman
-
We are determined that before the sun sets on this
terrible struggle our flag will be recognized throughout the world
as a symbol of freedom on the one hand, of overwhelming power on the
other. - G.C. Marshall, Chief of Staff
-
No compromise is possible and the victory of the
democracies can only be complete with the utter defeat of the war
machines of Germany and Japan. - G.C. Marshall, Chief of Staff
-
(Mariners) have written one of its most brilliant
chapters. They have delivered the goods when and where needed in
every theater of operations and across every ocean in the biggest,
the most difficult and dangerous job ever undertaken. As time goes
on, there will be greater public understanding of our merchant's
fleet record during this war. - President Franklin D. Roosevelt
-
The hand that held the dagger has struck it into the
back of its neighbor. - President Franklin D. Roosevelt (After Italy
invaded France)
-
History knows no greater display of courage than that
shown by the people of the Soviet Union. - Henry L. Stimson,
Secretary of War
-
Americans love to fight. All real Americans love the
sting of battle. -General George S. Patton, Jr.
-
Air superiority is the ultimate expression of
military power. - Winston Churchill.
-
We and our allies owe and acknowledge an ever-lasting
debt of gratitude to the armies and people of the Soviet Union. -
Frank Knox, secretary of the Navy
-
A thousand years will pass and the guilt of Germany
will not be erased - Hans Frank, the Nazi governor of Poland.
-
On the European Front the most important development
of the past year has been the crushing offensive of the Great Armies
of Russia... - President Franklin D. Roosevelt (April 29, 1942)
-
No compromise is possible and the victory of the
democracies can only be complete with the utter defeat of the war
machines of Germany and Japan. - George Marshall
-
This is a fight between a free world and a slave
world. - Vice President Henry A. Wallace
-
No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country.
He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country.
- General George S. Patton, Jr.
-
I have returned. - General Douglas Macarthur, Supreme
Allied Commander of South-West Pacific (at the Philippines, 1944)
-
Nuts - General MacAuliffe (when asked to surrender
during the Battle of the Bulge, 1944)
-
The American forces have suffered terrible losses.
The losses are far more than what Eisenhower has admitted, and worse
is ahead. Tunis is only a foretaste of what is waiting for us in
Europe. - Roane Waring, Commander of the American Legion (after the
victory at North Africa)
-
The Bomb will never go off, and I speak as an expert
in explosives. - Admiral William Daniel Leahy (advising President
Truman on the U.S. atom bomb project, 1945)
-
Don't fire until you can see the whites of their
eyes. - Major Devereux (the battle of Wake Island, 1941)
-
It is the function of the Navy to carry the war to
the enemy so that it will not be fought on U.S. soil. - Admiral
Chester W. Nimitz, Commander in Chief of the Pacific Fleet
-
A bright light filled the plane. The first shock-wave
hit us. We were eleven and a half miles slant range from the atomic
explosion but the whole airplane cracked and crinkled from the
blast... We turned back to look at Hiroshima. The city was hidden by
that awful cloud... mushrooming, terrible and incredibly tall. -
Colonel Paul Tibbets, the pilot of the B-29 Enola Gay
|