WWII was fought on multiple fronts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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WWII was fought on multiple fronts.

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WWII was fought on multiple fronts. Douglas MacArthur 1880 1964 During World War II, MacArthur fought in Southeast Asia against Japan. After the defeat of his ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WWII was fought on multiple fronts.


1
WWII was fought on multiple fronts.
2
Multiple Front war
  • A multiple front war divided the U.S. war efforts
    and fighting forces. The forces of the U.S. were
    divided between confronting Germany and Italy in
    North Africa and Europe and confronting Japan in
    the Pacific.

3
Multiple Front War
  • A multiple front war created a huge demand for
    wartime supplies and resources. The demand for
    men and supplies on all fronts challenged the
    resources of the United States and made the U.S.
    the major supplier for all the Allied Powers.

4
Strategic Objective
  •         1. Hitler first Churchill FDR wanted
    to concentrate on defeating Germany before giving
    Japan higher priority.

5
Axis Powers Leaders
  • Axis Powers - Germany, Italy, Japan. Axis
    Leaders
  • Adolf Hitler - Fascist dictator of Germany.
  • Benito Mussolini - Fascist dictator of Italy.
  • Hirohito - Emperor of Japan.

6
Allied Powers Leaders
  • Allied Powers - Great Britain, France, the
    U.S.S.R, and the United States after 1941.
    Allied Leaders
  • Winston Churchill - Prime Minister of Great
    Britain.
  • Josef Stalin - Communist dictator of the
    U.S.S.R.
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt - President of the United
    States, President Harry Truman after Roosevelts
    death in 1945

7
Advantages to the Allied Powers with the United
States involved in the war
  • 1. The capacity for war production of the United
    States provided a significant advantage.
  • 2. Fresh troops could be obtained from the United
    States. The Allied countries were tired because
    they had been fighting somewhere in Europe since
    1939.

8
Allied Turning Points in the War
  • Battle of Stalingrad (Sept. 1942)
  •   First major German defeat on land.

9
D-Day June 6, 1944
  • D-Day (June 6, 1944) Invasion of Normandy --
    "Operation Overlord"
  • a. Perhaps wars most important
    battle             b. Commanded by General
    Dwight D. Eisenhower             c. 120,000
    troops left England and stormed 5 beachheads at
    Normandy Coast.                 i. 800,000 more
    men within 3 weeks 3 million total
  • Signaled the beginning of the liberation of
    Europe

10
Liberation of Europe
  • Invasion of Germany             a. Pre-invasion
    bombing                 i. Hamburg all but
    wiped out in summer 1943                 ii.
    Berlin and other major cities and targets hit
    repeatedly
  • especially factories and oil refineries.

11
Europe surrenders May 8, 1945
12
The Pacific Front
  • Battle of Midway (June 4-7, 1942) turning point
    in the Pacific war         Japan never won
    another battle in the Pacific after the defeat at
    Midway.
  •            The US began Island Hopping towards
    the Japanese mainland

13
Island Hopping
  • Island Hopping military strategy began in 1943
    and involved the US forces attacking islands
    randomly as they made their way towards Japan.
    Allowed us to break through Japanese defenses and
    get closer to Japan

14
Island Hopping
15
"Kamakazie" attacks more frequent
16
The bombing of Japan
  • . Bombing of Japan resulted in destruction of
    most major cities             -- March 1945,
    100,000 die in a single Tokyo raid 60 of
    buildings destroyed.
  • At this point it did not look like the Japanese
    would surrender any time soon

17
Death of FDR
  • Election of 1944 and death of FDR     A. FDR,
    with running-mate Harry S. Truman, defeated
    Republican Thomas Dewey.         -- FDR elected
    to an unprecedented fourth term in office.    
    B. April 12, 1945 -- FDR died at Warm Springs, GA
        C. Vice President Harry Truman become
    president

18
Truman becomes President
President Harry S. Truman (1945-53)
19
The Manhattan Project
  • Super Secret project to create the atomic bomb

20
The Manhattan project
Site of the "Manhattan Project"- Los Alamos, NM
21
The explosion
22
"Fat Man"
23
"Little Boy"- "gadget" used on Hiroshima
24
The Atomic bomb
  • August 6, 1945 -- First atomic bomb ("Little
    Boy") dropped on Hiroshima         1. 80,000
    killed immediately 100,000 injured            
    -- Countless die later of radiation sickness or
    cancer         2. Bomb dropped by the Enola Gay
            3. Japanese govt still did not
    surrender

25
V-J Day
  • August 9, 2nd bomb ("Fat Man") dropped on
    Nagasaki 60,000 dead
  •     F. August 14, Japan surrendered         1.
    World War II is over.         2. Sept 2,
    Japanese formally surrendered aboard U.S.S.
    Missouri in
  • Tokyo Bay.

26
Decision to drop the Atomic Bomb
  • The decision to drop the atomic bomb became
    controversial in later few decades.         1.
    Most compelling reason for dropping the bomb was
    that it saved
  • countless U.S. lives who would have had to invade
    Japan.

27
Crew of "Enola Gay"- photographed right after
their return
28
Hiroshima after the bomb
29
The aftermath of the Atomic bomb
30
Japan surrenders
31
Japan surrenders
August 15, 1945- VJ Day
32
Important American Military Leaders
  • Omar Bradley Omar Nelson Bradley, (1893-1981),
    American general, who during World War II
    commanded the U. S. 12th Army Group in Europe.
  • Took part in the invasion of Normandy D-Day

33
Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower 1890-1969
  • American general and 34th President of the United
    States was the principal architect of the
    successful Allied invasion of Europe during World
    War II and of the subsequent defeat of Nazi
    Germany.
  • He led the assault on the French coast at
    Normandy, on June 6, 1944, and held together the
    Allied units through the European campaign that
    followed.

34
Douglas MacArthur 1880 1964
  • During World War II, MacArthur fought in
    Southeast Asia against Japan. After the defeat of
    his forces in the Philippines, he made his famous
    statement to the troops who were left behind I
    shall return.
  • He became Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces
    in the Southwest Pacific and took command of
    Australian, American, Dutch, and other Allied
    forces defending Australia, fighting mainly in
    and around New Guinea.

35
George Patton 1885-1945
  • During World War II he served in North Africa and
    Sicily before becoming the commander of the Third
    Army.
  • Patton distinguished himself in various World War
    II campaigns including the invasion of North
    Africa and the capture of Sicily.

36
Chester A. Nimitz 1885-1966
  • In December 1941, however, he was designated as
    Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet and Pacific
    Ocean Areas, where he served throughout the war.
  • On December 19, 1944, he was advanced to the
    newly created rank of Fleet Admiral.
  • He commanded American forces during their long
    advance across the Pacific to full victory in
    August 1945.
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