Title: Chapter 27, Section 5: The End of the War
1Chapter 27, Section 5The End of the War
- Main Idea In the Pacific, the Japanese continued
to resist American advances until two atomic
bombs were dropped on their home islands.
2A. War in the Pacific
- 2 main goals of the US in the Pacific regain the
Philippines invade Japan. - Island Hopping
- Island Hopping capturing some Japanese-held
islands going around others to use them as
steppingstones to control the Pacific advance
on Japan. - 1. American ships shell an island, 2. Troops land
under heavy gunfire, 3. Troops engage in
hand-to-hand combat, suffering heavy losses. - Navajo code-talkers were used to send radio
messages from ship to ship island to island in
secrecy (Japan never learns). - MacArthur returns to the Philippines,
Americans capture Iwo Jima Okinawa. - Japanese kamikaze pilots intentionally crashed
loaded planes into US ships (USS Emmons), rather
than surrender (suicide).
3Allied Counter-Offensive Island-Hopping
4Japanese Kamikaze PlanesThe Scourge of the
South Pacific
Kamikaze Pilots
Suicide Bombers
5Pacific Theater of Operations
Gen. MacArthur Returns to the Philippines!
1944
6- Attacking the Home Islands
- By April 1945, American forces were close enough
to Japan to launch an attack on the homeland. - To prepare, American bombers pounded Japanese
factories cities, while our ships bombarded the
coastlines. - Japanese civilians suffered heavily, but the
Japanese government still refused to surrender
(Bushido). - The US planned to invade Japan in autumn 1945,
but they expected very high casualties based on
the number of men lost in previous island
battles. - Estimates ranged from 250,000 to a million more
if we invaded Japan.
7B. The Surrender of Japan
- Potsdam Declaration Allies warned Japan to
surrender or face prompt and utter destruction,
meaning the newly developed atomic bomb
(Manhattan Project). - Japan ignored the warning, mostly because they
didnt realize what we had. - On August 6, 1945 the Enola Gay dropped an atomic
bomb on Hiroshima, destroying most of the city
killing over 70,000 instantly. Japan still didnt
surrender. - On August 9th, the US dropped a 2nd bomb on
Nagasaki, killing over 40,000 more instantly. - Many more from both cities will die later from
the effects of radiation. - Japan surrendered on August 14th (V-J Day). The
formal ceremony (9/2/45) took place on the USS
Missouri in Tokyo Bay. War is over!
8Little Boy Fat Man
Enola Gay Crew
9Hiroshima August 6, 1945
- 70,000 killed immediately.
- 48,000 buildings. destroyed.
- 100,000s died of radiation poisoning cancer
later.
10Nagasaki August 9, 1945
- 40,000 killed immediately.
- 60,000 injured.
- 100,000s died of radiation poisoning cancer
later.
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12V-J Day (September 2, 1945)
13C. The Deadliest War in History
- Death Toll - Historians estimate the total
number of deaths for WWII to be between 30 60
million people worldwide. - Much of Europe Asia was destroyed by bombers
(houses, roads, bridges, RRs, factories, farms
). By the end of the war, millions were left
homeless out of work. - After the war, Americans were horrified to learn
of the brutal mistreatment of POWs. - The Bataan Death March - After capturing the
Philippines in 1942, the Japanese forced about
75,000 American Filipino prisoners to march 65
miles with little food or water. 10,000 of them
died or were killed along the way.
14 WW II Casualties
Europe
Asia
Each symbol indicates 100,000 dead in the
appropriate theater of operations
15The U.S. the U.S.S.R. Emerged as the Two
Superpowers
Japanese War Crimes Trials
Bio-Chemical Experiments
General Hideki Tojo
16- The Holocaust
- In the final months of the war in Europe, Allied
forces discovered the Nazi death camps in
Eastern Europe. - Over 12 million victims (Jews, Poles, Slavs,
Gypsies, POWs, etc.) were starved, tortured
slaughtered at concentration camps such as
Auschwitz Dachau. - Gas chambers, crematoria, other atrocities were
found. - Half of the victims were Jews (6 million). The
Jewish population of Europe shrank from 9 to 3
million during the war. - Throughout the war, the Nazis sent undesirables
to these extermination camps as they conquered
various nations, hoping to rid Europe of these
groups of people. - War Crimes Trials
- After the war, Nazi leaders were put on trial for
war crimes at the Nuremberg Trials in Germany. - 12 were sentenced to death thousands were
imprisoned. - Many others, however, escaped to different parts
of the world. - Elie Wiesel, a Jew, spent the rest of his life
hunting down escaped Nazis.
17Horrors of the Holocaust Exposed
Crematoria at Majdanek
Entrance to AuschwitzWork Makes You Free
18Mass Graves at Bergen-Belsen
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20The Nuremberg War TrialsCrimes Against Humanity