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Allied Strategy In WWII

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The significance of the European and Pacific Theaters ... Casablanca (Jan 1943) FDR and WC agreed to. Continue attack in Mediterranean ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Allied Strategy In WWII


1
Allied Strategy In WWII
  • Slow, Lesson 11

2
Axis Strategy in WWII
  • Points to remember
  • Quick victory over Poland and avoid a two-front
    war?
  • Hitlers national strategy
  • Achievement of Japans war aims
  • Similarities between Japanese and German
    strategies

3
Educational Objectives
  • Allied political and military strategies
  • Constraints on decision-making process
  • FDR v WC v JS

4
Allied Strategy
  • Overview
  • Focus
  • Themes and objectives

5
Soviet Strategy
  • Themes
  • Evolution
  • Expectations

6
Themes of Soviet Strategy
  • Prewar military and ideological problems
  • Strategy toward Germany and Japan
  • The Soviet-German Pact
  • The impact of military surprise.
  • National mobilization and resistance
  • Soviet perceptions of and interaction with the
    other allies
  • The significance of the European and Pacific
    Theaters
  • The Soviet vision of the political end-state and
    the post war world

7
Evolution
  • 1939 Non-aggression pact with Germany
  • 1939-40 Buffer zone to the west
  • 1941 Defeat Germans
  • 1942 Focus on Germany, hold off Japan
  • 1945 Enters war against Japan

8
British Strategy
  • Themes
  • Evolution

9
Themes of British Strategy
  • Prewar assumptions and objectives
  • Churchills policies, strategies, relationships
  • FDR and total war
  • The Influence of WWI
  • Anglo-American strategy debates
  • The British contribution
  • British public opinion and strategy
  • Effect of constrained resources
  • British aims
  • The post war empire and its impact

10
Evolution
  • Summer 1940
  • Fall 1941
  • Spring 1942
  • November 1943

11
U.S. Strategy
  • State of U.S. forces
  • Themes
  • Evolution

12
Themes of U.S. Strategy
  • Pre-war context
  • Transition to war
  • Development of wartime strategy
  • Germany First Strategy
  • Coalition Warfare
  • North African-Med Strategy
  • FDRs Policies
  • American public opinion
  • Production decisions
  • Global logistics
  • U.S. contribution
  • Decision to use A-bomb
  • Interaction re Postwar
  • Emergence of the Cold War

13
Evolution
  • 1930s
  • Rainbow 5 War Plan
  • After Sep 1939
  • Dec 1940
  • Plan Dog
  • Jan 1941
  • Germany First

14
Alliance Strategy
  • Themes
  • Evolution

15
Themes of Alliance Strategy
  • Atlantic Charter (Aug 41)
  • Germany First (Dec 41-Jan 42)
  • Peripheral/indirect (Jan 43)
  • Second Front (Nov 43)
  • Unconditional surrender (Feb 45)
  • Postwar decisions (July 45)

16
Atlantic Charter (Aug 1941)
  • Postwar world
  • No territorial changes
  • Self determination of peoples
  • Free trade
  • Fullest collaboration between nations
  • Freedom from fear and want
  • Disarmament

17
Germany First (Dec 41-Jan 42)
  • Arcadia Conference
  • ABC-1 Agreement
  • Early defeat of Germany
  • Maintenance of Med positions
  • Defensive in Far East
  • Established the CCS
  • Declaration of the United Nations
  • Offensive in North Africa

18
The Major Allied issue
  • Opening of of the Second Front
  • Factors
  • Readiness for cross-channel invasion
  • Protection of the British Empire
  • Where to attack?
  • Torch in Nov 42

19
Peripheral/indirect (Jan 43)
  • Casablanca (Jan 1943)
  • FDR and WC agreed to
  • Continue attack in Mediterranean
  • Marshall forces in England

20
Second Front (Nov 43)
  • Teheran, Nov 1943
  • Second Front in May 1944
  • Establish the United Nations

21
Unconditional surrender (Feb 45)
  • Yalta, 1945
  • Unconditional surrender
  • USSR to enter war against Japan
  • Free elections in occupied countries
  • U.N. Security Council

22
Postwar decisions (July 45)
  • Potsdam, July 1945
  • Draft treaties
  • Trials for War Criminals
  • No monetary reparations

23
Postwar Visions
  • Britain
  • The U.S.
  • Soviet Union

24
Role of Perceptions and Interests
  • Effect on strategies?
  • Meaning of victory

25
Contributions
  • Churchill
  • Roosevelt
  • Stalin

26
Issues for Consideration
  • Allied War Aims
  • Postwar Visions
  • Perceptions
  • Roosevelt and Churchill
  • Allied Strategy

27
Allied War Aims
  • What were the Allied war aims?
  • How did the Allies attempt to achieve those ends?

28
Postwar Visions
  • How did the visions coincide or clash?
  • Could the collapse of the alliance have been
    avoided?

29
Perceptions
  • What impact did the varying perceptions and
    interests have on the course of Allied strategy
    and conflict termination?

30
Roosevelt and Churchill
  • Evaluate the contributions of Roosevelt and
    Churchill to Allied strategy in WWII.
  • How might things have been different without
    these two leaders?

31
Allied Strategy
  • What was the basis for allied military and
    political strategy during WWII?
  • What key ideological and economic issues
    motivated G.B., the U.S. and the Soviet Union to
    join forces against the Axis powers?
  • Did any of the Allies have a particular strategy
    for winning the war?

32
Points to remember
  • Major difference between US and British
    strategists
  • Results of Arcadia Conference
  • Soviet Union's expectations of its allies in 1941
  • State of US military forces in Sep 1939?

33
Next Week
  • Cold War and Beyond
  • Course Review
  • Exam March 15th (Two weeks)
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