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The Second World War

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Title: The Second World War


1
The Second World War
Era 7 Global War
  • Day Three
  • Session 4B
  • Craig Benjamin

2
This Lecture to Include
  • Part One Prelude to War
  • Part Two Phase One
  • German-Soviet Alliance (1939 June 41)
  • Part Three Phase Two Nazi Supremacy in Europe
    (June 1941- July 1943)
  • Part Four Phase Three Triumph of the Grand
    Alliance (July 1943-May 1945)

academic.brooklyn.cuny
3
PART ONE PRELUDE TO WARGlobal War
  • 1939 - the year the world went to war?
    Eurocentric perspective because war had been on
    the march for previous eight years
  • Japanese invaded Manchuria in 1931 at war with
    China since 1937
  • From August 1938 Japanese also in conflict with
    the Soviet Red Army in Manchuria
  • Japan then joined Germany and Italy as one of the
    Axis powers
  • 1939 simply the addition of Europe to the
    existing theaters of war - a regional war became
    a global one

Japanese reserves prepare to assault the Red
Army in Manchuria, Sept 1938
classifieds.aol.com
4
Rearmament!
www.regiamarina.it
  • Inaccurate to describe new global conflict as
    Hitlers War - all the steadily rearming
  • In 1937 Britain expanded and re-equipped the RAF
    France created new Ministry of Defense and
    nationalized its great arms manufacturers
  • European preparing for a protracted conflict in
    which industrial strength would be just as vital
    as trained men
  • Totalitarian states of Nazi Germany and Stalinist
    Russia had suffered less from the Depression than
    the Western Democracies had, so were better
    prepared

5
Military Expenditure Statistics
  • Germany by itself able to spend as much on
    military expenditure as all of the Western Powers
    put together
  • Military Expenditure (1933-38) in Millions of
    Pounds
  • USA 1,175
  • UK 1,201
  • France 1,088
  • Germany 3,540
  • USSR 2,808
  • (Source N. Davies, Europe p. 991)

www.insightmag.com
Nazi military parade, 1939
6
Russia and Germany United?
  • Stalin and Hitler possessed war machines far
    superior to anything else in Europe
  • If the USA kept out of a war, Western Powers
    would be hard pressed to contain them
  • If Stalin and Hitler joined forces, West would be
    powerless to stop them
  • All eyes therefore on Germany and the Soviet
    Union, and the unlucky countries trapped between
    them
  • Stalin not ready for full-scale war - purges had
    decimated the Red Army, and Soviet troops were
    already engaged against the Japanese
  • Preferred to lure Germany into a war with the
    Western Powers, while the USSR gathered its
    strength
  • Hitler had no such considerations he was in
    absolute command of a vast war machine, and pored
    over maps of Europe for possibilities for German
    expansion

7
Europe on the Eve of the War
history.acusd.edu/gen
8
Hitlers Ambitions in Poland
  • Early in 1939 Hitler attempted a deal with
    Poland
  • Poles should cede their rights in Danzig and
    permit building of an autobahn across Polish
    territory in return they could join Germany in a
    political and economic alliance
  • If Poland did not accept the deal, Germany would
    take Danzig and form an alliance with the Soviets
    against Poland
  • Proud Polish generals would not accede to the
    demands of an ex-Austrian corporal - preferred go
    down fighting
  • After weeks of delay from the Poles, Nazi
    propagandists complained about oppression of
    German nationals in Danzig
  • On March 31 Great Britain sent Poland an
    unsolicited Guarantee of Independence
  • On April 3rd Hitler had war plans drawn up for an
    invasion of Poland

9
Czechoslovakia
Germany gains large sections of Czechoslovakia
without firing a shot!
users.erols.com
  • Meantime, prize after prize fell into Hitlers
    lap
  • In March he demanded the break-up of
    Czechoslovakia, and then drove in triumph into
    Prague without a shot being fired
  • Hungarians seized Sub-Carpathian Ruthenia without
    anyones permission
  • On Good Friday (April 2nd) the Italian army
    invaded Albania Europe was already at war!

10
German-Soviet Alliance
  • In the first week of May, Germany and USSR began
    to talk
  • Realized scale of their opportunities for mutual
    territorial gain, with Poland the only obstacle
    to dividing up Eastern Europe between them
  • Hitler believed he could take care of France and
    Britain single-handedly Stalin felt the same way
    about the Eastern Europe
  • Both realized that the USA (with military
    expenditure less than Britains) would be
    powerless to intervene if they acted quickly
  • On June 14 Hitler told his generals to be ready
    for war in 8 weeks on 22 August he told another
    conference that War is better now
  • His notes read No pity brutal attitude
    might is right greatest severity

11
Hitler and Stalin
www.historie-nu.dk
12
The Outbreak of the War
  • Aug 23 Germany and the Soviet Union signed a Pact
    of Non-Aggression
  • License for war for Hitler and Stalin each now
    free to assault its neighbors without
    interference from the other
  • At 1.00 pm on August 31st Hitler issued Directive
    No. 1 for the conduct of war against Poland
  • War opened in true Nazi style (criminals used
    criminals) German convicts rounded up by the SS
    and marched into a radio station near the
    German-Polish border
  • Convicts then stormed the radio station
  • (stage-managed by the SS) Polish
  • nationalist songs played over the air
  • convicts taken outside and shot
  • Nazi news service then announced that
  • the Polish Army had launched an
  • unprovoked attack on the Third Reich

13
PART TWO PHASE ONE OF THE WAR1939- June
1941
14
World War!
  • Invasion of Poland
  • transformed series of
  • regional conflicts into a
  • world-wide conflict
  • By involving the USSR (already at war with Japan)
    it linked European and Asian theaters of
    operation
  • Japan, the USSR, Poland, Germany and the Western
    Powers all enmeshed in a web of conflict the
    Second World War had begun!
  • German-Soviet pact also transformed Europe by
    destroying Poland they re-established a common
    frontier
  • Gave Hitler a chance to attack the West with
    Stalins support
  • Stalin may have hoped that Germany would be
    defeated in the West or that Germany and the
    West would fight themselves to bloody stalemate,
    allowing the USSR to emerge as the supreme power
    in Europe

15
Three Phases of War
  • First phase (1939-June 41) while the
    German-Soviet pact lasted, Germans achieved a
    series of stunning victories in Western Europe
  • When the pact broke down, the war entered a
    second phase (June 1941- July 1943) - Germany
    attacked the USSR and that conflict became the
    contest whereby Europes fate would be decided
  • Western Powers were reduced to control only of
    Britain could exert only peripheral influence
  • In the final phase
  • (July 1943-45) Soviet
  • Army in the East combined
  • with British and American
  • forces in the West to
  • crush Germany

16
Invasion of Poland
  • German and Polish armies each had 60 divisions,
  • but after occupation of Czechoslovakia Poland
    was
  • surrounded on three sides
  • German superiority of tanks and air power and as
    a result of the pact could drive deep into Poland
    without the Red Army intervening
  • Despite guaranteeing Polish independence,
    Western Powers declared war on Germany, but did
    not intervene in the fighting
  • At dawn on 1 Sept German columns stormed into
    Poland from north, west and south by the 9th
    Warsaw was surrounded and the civilian population
    mercilessly bombarded Stuka bombers destroyed
    factories, roads and railways Warsaw dug in for
    a siege that lasted two weeks
  • Then Red Army poured into eastern Poland and
    drove straight to the agreed demarcation line
    along the River Bug
  • Germans and Soviets held a joint victory parade
    before dividing Poland up between them the USSR
    gained all of Poland east of the River Bug

17
(No Transcript)
18
Occupied Poland
On German maps "Poland" disappeared as a
geopolitical entity. Annexed territories (shaded
dark brown) Danzig and northwestern lands were
incorporated into the German provinces of Danzig,
West Prussia, and East Prussia, and southwestern
lands, including Auschwitz, into Upper Silesia.
Western Poland, including Lodz, became a new
German province, the "Wartheland." The Bialystok
district (shaded light brown) became a
quasi-incorporated area. The rest of eastern
Poland under German administration (shaded light
red) was merged with the German occupied Baltic
states and Soviet Union into a "Reichskommissariat
Ostland" (in the north) and a "Reichskommis-saria
t Ukraine" (in the south).
users.erols.com
19
Polish Terror!
  • Polish Government escaped into exile Poland west
    of the Bug now occupied by the Germans, who
    instituted a policy of racial screening
  • Himmler ordered all the aged and mentally
    handicapped seized from the hospitals orphanages
    raided for boys and girls suitable for breeding
    experiments concentration camps constructed at
    Auschwitz and Majdanek
  • 15,000 Polish intellectuals, officials,
    politicians and clergy were shot or sent to
    concentration camps
  • Polands large Jewish community ordered into
    ghetto districts which were gradually locked and
    segregated
  • In the Soviet zone 2 million individuals
  • transported to terror camps 26,000 Polish
  • prisoners of war were taken from their camps
  • and shot in a series of massacres

20
Campaigns of 1939 and Early 1940
  • Western Powers remained impotent in the 20
    months following the fall of Poland, 13 European
    countries were overrun by Germany and the USSR
  • Soviets attempted to invade Finland, but Fins
    held them off for 5 months, revealing serious
    deficiencies in the Red Armys equipment and
    tactics
  • Finland and the USSR signed a treaty which ceded
    some parts of Finland to the Soviets, but
    guaranteed Finnish neutrality
  • Hitler invaded Denmark in April 1940, followed by
    Norway
  • Denmark allowed to keep its King and Queen
    Norway placed under the control of Norwegian
    collaborator Quisling Sweden remained
    independent (so long as its iron ore continued to
    flow into Germany)
  • German policy in the West was far more lenient
    than in the East!

21
German Conquests by the Spring of 1940
users.erols.com
22
Conquest of France
  • By early summer Nazis ready to
  • assault Western Powers, before
  • British rearmament was complete
  • Campaign based on three strategies
  • operation in Belgium and the
  • Netherlands to clear the way major
  • land operation against France and an air
    operation against Britain to subdue the Royal
    Navy
  • Campaign was stunningly successful Belgium
    surrendered Holland was invaded in 18 days and
    France defeated in less than 5 weeks!
  • German Panzers drove a steel column between the
    British in the north and the main French forces
    in the center
  • British Expeditionary Force totally beaten and
    forced to evacuate from Dunkirk fleeing French
    forces were simply overrun by the faster German
    Panzer divisions
  • Images - DUNKIRK

23
German Panzer Spearhead of the Campaigns
www.panzertole.de
24
French Defeat!
  • Following French capitulation, country was
    disarmed 2 million French soldiers sent to work
    in Germany
  • French Vichy government allowed some autonomy in
    the south, but northern France occupied by the
    Nazis
  • When Hitler staged his victory parade down the
    Champs-Elysees, he was master of Europe from
    Poland to the Pyrenees
  • A few British, Polish and Free French forces had
    scrambled back across the Channel to Britain
    British Prime Minister Winston Churchill declared
    A nation that produces three hundred types of
    cheese will never be lost!
  • Leader of the Free French and Post-War Prime
    Minister of France Charles de Gaulle declared
    France has lost the battle, but not the war!

www.ushmm.org
25
The Battle of Britain
  • Battle for air supremacy over Britain one of the
    Nazis costliest blunders
  • Campaign led by Goring, based on a plan of
    nightly bombings against ports and factories, and
    of air battles to defeat the RAF prelude to the
    invasion of Britain
  • Germans used a large force of 1,330 Heinkel and
    Junkers bombers (operating from bases in northern
    France) supported by packs of Messerschmitt and
    Focke-Wolf fighters
  • Opposed by RAF squadrons of Hurricanes and
    Spitfires (10 manned by Polish, Czech and French
    pilots)
  • Battle of Britain, fought over 4 months,
    culminated on 15 September when Goring decided
    that Luftwaffe losses could no longer be
    sustained - air offensive was indefinitely
    postponed
  • Churchill said in Parliament Never in the field
    of human conflict has so much been owed by so
    many to so few

26
Battle of Britain
www.hobbytyme.com
www.brooksart.com
www.nzedge.com
27
Significance of British Victory in the Air
  • Victory in the Battle of Britain gave Allied
    cause an impregnable base
  • Turned Britain into an unsinkable aircraft
    carrier, allowing for massive growth in Allied
    air power, a decisive element in ultimate success
  • Gained a breathing space for the Allies, in which
    Prime Minister Churchill was able to begin
    diplomatic efforts to bring the Americans into
    the war as soon as possible
  • American assistance kept Great Britain
    financially and psychologically afloat during the
    dark days of the war through the Lend-Lease Bill

www.jeanstephengalleries.com
28
  • War at sea longer
  • and more difficult
  • than the war in the
  • air
  • Germany challenged
  • British naval
  • supremacy with very
  • modern pocket
  • battleships and a fleet
  • of U-Boats
  • Germans sunk the British battleship Royal Oak in
    Scapa Flow the Germans lost the Graf Spee off
    the coast of Argentina then Germany lost the
  • massive Bismarck

The War at Sea
29
The North African Theater
www.worldwar2database.com
  • In the Mediterranean, Allies determined to keep
    control of North Africa and the Suez Canal
  • May 1940 Mussolini of Italy declared war and
    invaded the French Alps
  • Allies then surrounded the Italian base in
    Tripoli in North Africa German Afrika Korps
    dispatched to assist their Italian allies
  • Britains hold on Egypt made difficult by the
    arrival of the Germans, but their eventual
    victory at El Alamein in October 1942 secured
    North Africa for the Allies

30
The Soviets and Eastern Europe
Red Army enters Latvia
  • In June 1940 Stalin sent
  • Red Army into the Baltic states of Estonia,
    Latvia and Lithuania, and the Stalinist Terror
    machine then set to work
  • So ferocious were the massacres and deportations
    that the Baltic States welcomed the possibility
    of a Nazi advance into their countries
  • In Romania, whose fragile independence was based
    on the continued export of oil to Germany, Stalin
    seized several provinces, amidst fanfares of
    reunion with the Soviet fatherland

www.aviapress.com
31
Cracks in the Soviet-German Alliance
  • Nazi-Soviet partnership became increasingly
    tenuous it was obvious that Hitler was gaining
    more than Stalin
  • Hitlers victories also looked menacing to
    Stalin, because after their success in the West,
    there were only two destinations left for German
    expansion the Balkans or the Soviet Union
    itself!

www.joric.com/ Hitler
32
The Balkans Crisis
  • Germans invaded the Balkans in April 1941, but it
    was a fragmented, hostile and unstable region in
    which underground armies proliferated
  • Croatian Ustasi began cleansing of the Serbian
    minority, with concentration camps and mass
    executions
  • Yugoslav underground (led by the future leader of
    Post-War Yugoslavia Tito) determined to kill the
    German invaders and each other
  • In Greece, Athens occupied by the Germans
  • British resistance on Crete was overwhelmed
  • Stalin showed no solidarity with Hitler he had
  • signed a treaty with Yugoslavia before the
  • Germans invaded
  • He then signed a neutrality pact with
  • Japan, and cleared the decks for major
  • action against the Germans

Tito, 1943
33
End of the Alliance
  • German battle divisions were quickly transported
    from Yugoslavia to the Reichs eastern borders
  • By early June, East Prussia and Romania were full
    of German soldiers and tanks most of the worlds
    superpowers knew Hitler was about to attack
    Stalin
  • Soviets had not been idle, and had also built up
    huge military concentrations in forward areas
  • Suggests that Stalin had himself been preparing
    to attack Hitler, but was beaten to the draw the
    Wehrmacht struck at dawn on June 22 1941

34
PART THREE PHASE TWO OF THE WAR NAZI SUPREMACY
IN EUROPE (June 1941-July 1943)
War with Germany is announced in Moscow
35
Operation Barbarosa
  • Operation Barbarosa took the Germans deep into
    the Soviet Union - the decisive military
    operation of the Second World War in Europe!
  • Despite initial successes, the front ultimately
    accounted for 75 of all German war casualties -
    the main reason for Hitlers ultimate defeat
  • Initial attack in June 1941 had spectacular
    results German army of 3 million men destroyed
    Soviet air force on the ground in a few days, and
    then surrounded whole Soviet armies, taking
    millions of prisoners (photo above)
  • By December forward German units had laid siege
    to Leningrad and had Moscow in their binocular
    sites, before fresh Soviet troops began to arrive
    to hold them at bay

36
Operation Barbarosa Map
www.besaettelsestiden.dk
37
Into the Ukraine
  • In 1942 German priority was an advance along the
    southern steppes, to seize the Ukraine and
    oilfields of Baku
  • Retreating Soviets practiced scorched-earth
    policy, stripping the land bare and dismantling
    the factories, moving them further east
  • When the second winter set in, Germans were
    approaching the Volga at Stalingrad
  • Nazis treated as liberators at first in the
    Ukraine, but their arrogance spurned the
    Ukrainian nationalist movement - lost the chance
    to win the population to their side
  • Nazis massacred whole villages at will and
    treated the Slavs almost as savagely as they did
    the Jews
  • Ultimately Nazis responsible for the deaths of 9
    million Ukrainians!

38
Nazi Terror in the Ukraine
Nazi execution techniques
Farmers being led to execution
www.infoukes.com
39
Holocaust (Shoah)
  • In conjunction with their occupation of the
    Ukraine the Nazis launched their largest and most
    systematic campaign of racial genocide
  • What they termed the Final Solution of the
    Jewish Question has since been called the
    Holocaust (Shoah in Hebrew)
  • Attempt to use modern technology to kill every
    Jewish man, woman and child in Europe, simply for
    being Jews
  • No direct order form the Fuhrer has ever been
    unearthed, probably because he took precautions
    to conceal his involvement (but in a broadcast in
    January 1939 he had made a prophesy that a war
    would mean the destruction of all the Jews)
  • Nothing done until July 1941, when
  • Goring must have received an order
  • from Hitler to begin the
  • Final Solution

Germans cut the beard of a Jew in Poland
40
The Policy of Execution
  • Hesitation now cast aside - Resettlement became
    official euphemism for genocide!
  • As the Germans advanced into Russia, notorious
    Einsatzgruppen appeared, rounding up Jews and
    shooting them by the
  • thousands
  • In the chasm of
  • Babi Yar near
  • Kiev 70,000
  • victims were
  • shot and buried
  • in mass graves

Mass executions at Babi Yar
shamash.org/ holocaust
41
The Policy of Annihilation
  • Policy decisions then made by SS chief Adolph
    Eichmann to use Zyklon-B gas, build new death
    camps and expand those already in existence in
    Poland, and to draw up railway timetables to
    transport Jews to the camps
  • 7-8 million units were designated for
    processing the problem was to collect, transport
    and dispose of them as quietly and efficiently as
    possible

One of the cremation pits used to burn the
victims of Zyklon-B in Auschwitz
shamash.org/ holocaust
42
Jewish Response
  • From January 1942 the Final Solution proceeded
    uninterrupted for 3 years town by town, ghetto
    by ghetto, district by district, country by
    country
  • In 1942-3 it concentrated on the 3 million Jews
    of Poland in 1943-5 it spread to the Balkans,
    Hungary and Western Europe
  • Achieved 65 of its target, and was only stopped
    when allied soldiers overran the camps
  • Many Jews had no idea where they were going when
    they boarded the trains, and went quietly to
    their deaths

Others took part in armed uprisings, particularly
in Warsaw in opposition to the final clearance in
April 1943, when all but 80 of the fighters were
killed by the Nazis, and the survivors committed
suicide in their hideout in Mila Street
Bunker at Mila 18 before the suicide
www.scrapbookpages.com
43
Gentile Response
  • In Poland many Gentiles sold fugitive Jews to the
    Gestapo, but others risked their lives to protect
    the fugitives
  • Polish Resistance saved about 150,000 Jews by
    hiding them in barns, cellars and woods
  • In Denmark the King rode out into the streets in
    sympathy with the Jews wearing a Star of David
    armband - most of Denmarks 300 Jews escaped
  • In Romania police killed hundreds of thousands of
    Jews on their own, but the government did not
    cooperate with the Nazis in handing over Romanian
    Jews
  • In France the Vichy government operated its own
    concentration camp and made a distinction between
    native French Jews (only 8 of whom lost their
    lives) and alien refugee Jews, who were
    willingly handed over but the Resistance
    disrupted the deportation trains
  • In Holland most Jews were lost in Hungary a
    Swedish diplomat organized many Jewish escapes
  • In the Vatican, Pope Pius XII appeared
    indifferent, but he argued he was torn by fears
    of reprisals against German Catholics

44
Death Toll!
  • The exact death toll will never be known,
    although the estimate made for the Nuremberg
    Tribunal of 5.85 million is fairly accurate
  • In round figures, this included c.3 million from
    Poland, c.2 million from the USSR and c.1 million
    from other countries
  • These figures can be compared with estimates of
    c.8.7 million Soviet and c.3.5 million German
    military losses, and civilian losses of several
    millions

Burnt Jewish corpses in the concentration camp at
Maidenek
shamash.org/ holocaust
45
Disbelief in the Outside World
  • During the war the outside world could
  • not or would not grasp what was
  • happening
  • In September 1940 a Polish
  • Underground officer infiltrated Auschwitz for
    two years before escaping with news of what was
    happening, but the British government though the
    information was not credible
  • When a Polish courier visited Washington to give
    an eye-witness account, Chief Justice Frankfurter
    said We dont say you are lying, but even
    American Jews made no effort to help
  • When the proposal was eventually made to bomb the
    approaches to Auschwitz, the Allied Powers found
    reasons to refuse
  • Just as Stalin had done in the 1930s, Hitler was
    able to kill millions of Europeans without
    significant world reaction, until outsiders saw
    what was happening with their own eyes

Children at Auschwitz
46
Anglo-Soviet Alliance
  • German attack on the USSR transformed the worlds
    diplomatic alliances - Germany and the Soviet
    Union had moved from being partners to mortal
    enemies
  • Opened the way for West to combine with the USSR,
    although for Churchill (a lifelong
    anti-communist) this meant speaking well of the
    Devil himself
  • The German-Soviet pact was annulled and an
    Anglo-Soviet Treaty of Mutual Assistance signed
    in Moscow on 12 July 1941

www.heretical.com
Churchill and Stalin at the Kremlin, August 1942
47
The BIG Three
  • 11 Aug 1941 Churchill and Roosevelt signed
    Atlantic Charter 8 common principles included
    right of all peoples to choose the government
    under which they will live and that all
    nations of the world must come to the
    abandonment of the use of force
  • US Congress remained reluctant to enter the war
    until Japanese gave them a reason with the
    bombing of Pearl Harbor on 7 Dec 1941
  • Japanese had unwittingly unlocked the doors of
    the Grand Alliance, and put the Big Three
    Churchill, Stalin and Roosevelt into business
  • Ultimate outcome of the Red Army could avoid
    collapse, Britain could preserve its island
    fortress, and on the Americans could muster
    their substantial resources for simultaneous wars
    in Europe and the Pacific

Churchill and Roosevelt meet to sign the
Atlantic Charter, 1941
48
  • Battle of the Atlantic secured sea lanes which
    guaranteed Britains lifeline to the USA
  • 21 million tons of Allied shipping, 77,000
    British sailors and 70 of all German U-Boats
    were lost keeping the lanes open
  • Allied losses peaked in March 1943 before 41
    U-Boats were sunk by a single convoy, forcing
    Admiral Donitz to withdraw his submarines from
    the Atlantic for good
  • Royal Navy had the arduous task of keeping the
    USSR supplied by arctic convoys to Murmansk, at
    the cost of many ships and sailors

49
Battle of the Atlantic
home.wanadoo.nl/cclinks/ abtf/convoy
www.civilization.ca
50
  • From the first 1,000-bomber raid on Cologne on 31
    May 1942, Allied bombing offensive rose to a
    mighty crescendo
  • Campaign has been strongly criticized on
    practical and moral grounds - wholesale
    destruction of German cities by fire-bombing and
    the attempt to terrorize the civilian populations
    did not achieve the expected results
  • Despite 1.35 million tons of high explosive
    dropped on Germany, Nazi war industries were
    never halted, and German civilians, like their
    British counterparts, rallied to the national
    cause
  • One raid on Hamburg in May 1943 killed 43,000
    civilians
  • Another on Dresden may have killed over 100,000

Allied Bombing Raids
51
Bombing of DresdenFebruary 1945
mars.wnec.edu
52
A Second Front?
  • As soon as the Grand Alliance came together,
    Stalin pressed Anglo-Americans to open a second
    front - almost the entire German war machine (150
    divisions) was concentrated in the East, with
    only 4 divisions in Africa
  • But despite using their air raids to draw the
    Luftwaffe away from the Volga, and capturing
    large numbers of Axis prisoners in Africa, the
    Anglo-Americans found it difficult to oblige
  • Every European port was controlled by the enemy
    a vast Atlantic wall of defenses had been erected
    along the coast in France
  • Only possibility for a second front was on the
    southern periphery of Europe,
  • in Italy

German Panzer Divisions in Russia
53
The Italian Campaign
  • Germans forced to withdraw from North Africa in
    May 1943 Allies quickly followed them across the
    Mediterranean to Sicily
  • Invasion of Sicily began on 10 July 1943 after a
    rapid conquest the Allies jumped across to
    mainland and began the arduous task of pushing
    northwards up the mountainous peninsula, which in
    the end took them two years
  • Establishment of a major base at Brindisi allowed
    the projection of Allied air power deep into
    Central and Eastern Europe also forced the
    Germans to commit ill-spared divisions to the
    occupation of southern France
  • Invasion also led to the collapse of Mussolinis
    regime he was dismissed by the king on 25 July
    1943

freepages.military.rootsweb.com
54
The Eastern Front
  • On the Eastern Front the gigantic German-Soviet
    war was reaching its climax
  • Red Army used millions of soldiers as expendable
    manpower which amazed and demoralized the
    Germans waves of infantry used to assault fixed
    positions with no artillery support
  • Through fields of corpses the hordes of
    ill-equipped Soviets kept coming until German
    machine-guns overheated and gunners lost stomach
    for the slaughter
  • Accepted that the Soviet side could take losses
    of 41 and still carry the day they were also
    helped by the wilderness terrain and weather
  • In 1942 the Germans were drawn on and on,
    stretching their communication lines
  • By autumn, with the weather deteriorating and
    neither the Volga nor Caspian reached, a tactical
    withdrawal was needed, but Hitler refused and
    gave the fateful order to defend their ground at
    all costs

55
Stalingrad!
  • Eventually Germans reached the suburbs of
    Stalins City, but had only put their heads
    into a noose
  • Day after day Soviets under Marshall Zhukov
    inched forward around the German flanks until
    they were surrounded
  • Three months of deadly hand-to-hand fighting in
    the icy, deserted ruins led to the surrender of
    the Germans on 2 February1943
  • Red Army then went on the offensive for the first
    time in two years tide of war had turned
  • Battle of Stalingrad cost over one million
    soldiers lives, and was the largest single battle
    in world history
  • News flashed around the world and gave heart to
    resistance movements the Nazi war machine was
    shown to be fallible and people began to dream of
    liberation

56
S T A L I N G R A D
www.dhm.de/lemo
57
PART FOUR Phase Three- Triumph of the Grand
Alliance (July 1943-May 1945)
58
Grand Alliance on the Offensive
  • From mid-May 1943 Grand Alliance held the upper
    hand in almost every sphere - Reich was under
    siege!
  • Combined resources of American industrial
    strength, Russian manpower and the British Empire
    could not be matched by Hitlers shrinking realm
  • Allies biggest problem was in political and
    strategic coordination, and three personal
    meetings of the Big Three were organized
    Tehran (Dec 1943), Yalta (Feb 1945) and Potsdam
    (June 1945)
  • Three items on the agenda war aims, priorities
    of the Pacific and European wars, and the plans
    for post-war Europe
  • War aims were simple the unconditional
    surrender of Germany
  • War in the Pacific was being shouldered by the
    Americans and member states of the British
    Empire, particularly Australia and New Zealand
    Stalin maintained strict neutrality towards Japan

59
Plans for Post-War Europe
  • Plans for the future of Europe never reached full
    agreement
  • Anglo-Americans excluded Stalin from any
    decisions about Western Europe Stalin had his
    own plans for Eastern Europe
  • Sole exception was Greece, where Churchill
    insisted on continuing western influence in
    effect the Anglo-Americans handed Eastern
    Europe over to Stalin as part of the Soviet
    sphere of influence
  • Post-war fate of Poland could not be agreed upon
    by the two sides - its plight is often seen as
    the source of the Cold War
  • Soviets demanded that large part of eastern
    Poland should remain as part of the USSR, and
    because Churchill and Roosevelt needed Stalins
    Red Army to continue its effort against the
    Germans, they urged the Polish government in
    exile to agree to the Soviets demands

60
Tehran Conference
Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill At the Tehran
Conference
  • Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin had their first
    wartime meeting in Tehran from 28 November to 1
    December 1943
  • Agreed on the urgency of a second front in
    France, and also on the post-war independence of
    Iran, but disagreed violently over Poland
  • The meeting was hardly auspicious, but there was
    confidence in the prospect of a continuing Allied
    assault on the Nazis

61
Red Army Offensives, 1943-45
  • Red Army offensives kept the Wehrmacht constantly
    reeling in a series of huge forward leaps
  • Colossal concentrations of men and equipment
    unleashed on the Germans over-stretched lines
    like an irresistible flood
  • Tactic was to cut off and isolate points of
    resistance, leaving them for destruction at a
    later stage
  • Many German fortresses (like Breslau) and a
    number of German armies were simply isolated and
    bypassed -still intact when Berlin fell
  • Red Army had a reputation for terror, replacing
    Nazi totalitarianism with Stalinist terrorism -
    violence, rape and pillage
  • First German villages they liberated were
    massacred German women were raped then crucified
    on barn doors
  • Red Armys drive into central Europe one of the
    grandest and most terrible military operations in
    history it has been described as the
    Juggernaut of the Comintern, crushing all
    beneath its wheels

62
Red Army Juggernaut
Dead German soldiers, Russia
www.marxists.o
63
D-Day, 6 June 1944
  • Second Front finally opened on 6 June 1944,
    D-Day
  • British, American, Canadian and Polish troops
    landed
  • on the beaches of Normandy
  • Operation Overlord required safe disembarkation
    of hundreds of thousands of men and their
    equipment on a heavily fortified coast - most
    difficult technical problem of the whole war
  • Succeeded because of good planning, air
    supremacy, effective use of deception (convincing
    Hitler that the real attack would be at Calais)
    and good luck
  • Weather played a part the biggest storm in the
    English Channel for 25 years meant that German
    commander Rommel went home for the weekend!
  • US General Dwight D Eisenhower, postponed the
    start twice, then gave the order to send 156,000
    men, 2,000 warships, 4,000 landing craft and
    10,000 warplanes underway, while the gale
    continued to rage

64
Defensive obstacles on Juno Beach,Aerial photo
one week before D-Day
www.303rdbga.com
65
The Landings at Normandy
  • One throw of the dice paid off - storm began to
    subside in the middle of the night
  • American paratroopers of the 82nd and 101st
    Airborne jumped into the middle of the German
    lines, and with their British colleagues captured
    vital bridges and canals
  • At dawn the main force waded ashore on five
    beaches 73,000 of the US 1st Army hit Utah and
    Omaha 83,000 of the 2nd British and 1st Canadian
    Armies stormed Gold, Juno and Sword
  • Apart from fierce resistance at Omaha, shocked
    German defenders were quickly defeated - Allies
    won their
  • finger hold in France
  • After delays in capturing the
  • ports of Caen and
  • Cherbourg, by 9 July the
  • road was clear for the race
  • to Paris, and the
  • Rhine beyond

66
www.max3d.pl/forum
67
US Cemetery at St. Laurent, Normandy Above Omaha
Beach Photo C. Benjamin, July 2008
68
Omaha Beach Today Photo C. Benjamin, July 2008
69
Liberation of Paris
  • By July 20 (when Hitler narrowly survived an
    attempt to assassinate him by a number of German
    officers) Americans were in the suburbs of Paris
  • On 19 August (in coordination with the Americans)
    French Resistance led an uprising in Paris -
    Germans began to pull back
  • General Leclercs French armored division given
    the honor of spearheading the advance into the
    city
  • On 25 August, with Nazi snipers still active,
    General de Gaulle walked magnificently erect down
    the Champs-Elysees and into the great cathedral
    of Notre Dame Paris was free, and France
    liberated

hsgm.free.fr
70
Setbacks for the Western Allies
hsgm.free.fr
V1 Rocket in flight
  • Despite the success of D-Day, Western Allies
    encountered many setbacks
  • In Italy Rome was eventually liberated, but only
    after the Allied armies had been bottled up for
    months at Monte Cassino
  • One week after D-Day the London Blitz was
    resumed, with V1 and V2 flying bombs dropping on
    the city
  • In eastern Belgium in December the American army
    under Patton had to absorb fierce German
    counterattacks in the last major stand of the
    Wehrmacht - Battle of the Bulge
  • In Greece the British army arrived only to find
    itself in the middle of a civil war

71
  • Terminal conquest of Germany between Jan and May
    1945 took place amidst extraordinary scenes
  • In the West Allied bombers reduced German cities
    to piles of rubble full of corpses
  • In the East millions of desperate German
    refugees trekked westwards ahead of the Red Army
    through the winter snows
  • Hitler drafted all German males aged 14 and
    older - most of these schoolboys, invalids and
    veterans died from the Soviet policy of killing
    anyone in German uniform
  • Soviets marched through Poland and raced for
    Berlin
  • Americans had a lucky break when the Germans
    failed to destroy the last bridge over the Rhine
    at Remagen, allowing Patton to cross the river
    and join the race for Berlin
  • From his bunker beneath the debris of Berlin,
    Hitler watched the Reichs defenses crumble!

Defeat of Germany
72
The Big Three Meet at Yalta
  • When Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin met
  • for a second time at Yalta in Crimea from
  • 4 to 11 February 1945, the end was already close
  • Agreed on
  • - establishment of four separate Allied zones of
    occupation in Germany
  • - destruction of the Reichs military-industrial
    capacity
  • - prosecution of war criminals
  • - need to give Germans no more than minimal
    subsistence
  • Agreed that Poland should have free elections,
    and that the provisional government should draw
    its members form both pro-Soviet and pro-Western
    Poles
  • Also agreed that the Soviets would enter the war
    against Japan two or three months after the end
    of hostilities in Europe

73
teachpol.tcnj.edu/amer
Conference of the Big Three at Yalta
74
The Fall of Berlin
  • Siege of Berlin (planned in Yalta)
  • left to the Red Army lasted for three
  • weeks from 20 April
  • Zhukov poured in reserves without counting the
    cost - probably lost more men in this one
    operation than the US army lost in the course of
    the war Berlin sold itself dearly
  • As the noose tightened, Nazis slipped out,
    including Hitlers deputy Martin Boormann and a
    plane load of secret Nazi documents, neither of
    which were ever seen again
  • On April 29 Hitler married Eva Braun next day
    the newly-weds died in a poison and pistol-shot
    suicide pact
  • Russians were only 200 yards away when the
    Hitlers died their last remains were buried by
    the KGB in East Germany two fragments of
    Hitlers skull were later produced from ex-Soviet
    archives in 1993

www.buehler-hd.de/ medien/bild/berlin1
75
VE Day, 9 May 1945 New York City
Victory in Europe Day followed in the second week
of May It meant annihilation for the Nazis and
total defeat for the German nation The moment of
Germanys unconditional surrender was fixed at
midnight on May 8th, 1945
www.zer0.org/ve
76
The Conference at Potsdam
  • From 17 July to 2 August 1945 Allied leaders met
    for the last time in Potsdam of the wartime
    leaders, only Stalin survived
  • Churchill defeated in the General Election and
    replaced in the middle of the conference by the
    new British socialist PM Clement Atlee
  • Roosevelt had died before the fall of Germany -
    succeeded by his no-nonsense Vice-President Harry
    Truman
  • Because of major ideological differences between
    the three leaders, they stuck to practical maters
  • Germany to be administered by an Interallied
    Council Austria restored to independence France
    given back Alsace-Lorraine and Czechoslovakia the
    Sudentland
  • Poland given a new border, and all Germans living
    east of it were expelled all Nazi leaders who
    had been captured were to stand trial before an
    International War Crimes Tribunal

77
The New Big Three at Potsdam
Atlee, Truman and Stalin
aerostories.free.fr
78
Nuremburg War Crimes Trials
  • Tribunal met in Nuremburg from 20 November 1945,
    and ran through 403 open sessions until the final
    sentences were handed down ten months later on 1
    October 1946
  • 21 defendants, who all pleaded not guilty, were
    tried with great decorum by the four allied
    judges for war crimes and crimes against humanity
  • In final sentencing, some Nazis acquitted on all
    counts, and others received prison sentences from
    10 years to life
  • Ten sentenced to death, including Goring, Jodl,
    Ribbentrop and Hess
  • Goring committed suicide by swallowing a cyanide
    capsule hidden in a hollow tooth the others were
    executed on 16 October, with defiant Nazi words
    on their lips Streichers last words were
  • Heil Hitler!
  • The Bolsheviks
  • will hang you all

79
Nazi Defendants at Nuremburg
paulvictor.org
80
Conclusion
  • With executions of the leading Nazis, Second
    World War had ended, history of the next three
    decades in Europe would be dominated by just the
    sort of tensions between the democratic West and
    communist East that Streichers last prophetic
    words had envisaged
  • However one interprets the causes and conclusion
    of the war, the consequences were soon to become
    evident.
  • European hegemony over the world was at an end
    and two new superpowers on the fringes of Western
    civilization had emerged to take its place

Even before the last battles of the war had been
fought, the USA and USSR had arrived at two very
different visions for the post-war world
81
The Future?
  • No sooner had the war ended than their
    differences gave rise to a new and potentially
    even more devastating conflict the Cold War
  • Though Europeans seemed mere pawns in the
    struggle between the new superpowers, they
    managed to stage a remarkable recovery of their
    own civilization as we will begin to see next
    lecture!
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