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The U.S. in World War II

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Title: The U.S. in World War II


1
The U.S. in World War II
http//www.archives.gov/research/ww2/photos/images
/ww2-05.jpg
http//www.archives.gov/research/ww2/photos/images
/ww2-06.jpg
http//www.archives.gov/research/ww2/photos/images
/ww2-02.jpg
http//www.archives.gov/research/ww2/photos/
  • Section 1 Mobilizing for Defense
  • Section 2 The War for Europe and North Africa
  • Section 3 The War in the Pacific
  • Section 4 The Home Front

2
Japanese Advances
  • Japan dominates the Pacific Theatre and takes
    over many Allied territories
  • Guam
  • Wake Island
  • Hong Kong
  • Singapore
  • Burma
  • Indonesia
  • Thailand
  • Many other places

http//www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/pacificwa
r/timeline.htm
3
Siege of the Philippines
  • Japan invades the Philippine Islands
  • General Douglas MacArthur commander of Allied
    forces in the Pacific
  • 80,000 U.S. and Filipino troops battled Japanese
    forces
  • Troops were fighting in Bataan when MacArthur was
    ordered to leave
  • MacArthur promised to return and liberate the
    Philippines I shall return!

4
Fall of Bataan and the Bataan Death March
  • April 1942 the U.S. and Filipino troops
    surrendered
  • It marked the largest capitulation in the history
    of an American military command
  • 75,000 U.S. and Filipino troops were marched a
    week with little to no food or water
  • Those who fell behind were killed
  • Many atrocities committed
  • ¼ are believed not to have survived the journey

Prisoners on the march from Bataan to the prison
camp, May 1942. (National Archives)
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bataan_Death_March
5
Fall of Corregidor
  • Island fortress in Manila Bay
  • Wainwright withdraws to island to hold out
    against the Japanese
  • 11,000 troops endured constant bombardment
  • Corregidor surrendered in May 1942

The island stronghold of Corregidor at the
entrance to Manila Bay has fallen after a lengthy
siege and Japanese troops lower the American
flag.
6
Doolittles Raid
  • Lieutenant Colonel James Doolittle led 16 bomber
    in the attack on Tokyo on April 18, 1942
  • Took off from aircraft carriers in B-25s
  • Hit at the heart of Japan
  • Improved U.S. morale
  • Hurt Japanese morale

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Doolittle
Lt Col James H. Doolittle, USAAF (front), leader
of the raiding force, wires a Japanese medal to a
500-pound bomb, during ceremonies on the flight
deck of USS Hornet (CV-8), shortly before his
force of sixteen B-25B bombers took off for
Japan. The planes were launched on April 18,
1942.
7
Battle of the Coral Sea
  • May 1942
  • 1st time the ships in battle did not fire at each
    other
  • Entire battle fought in the air
  • Stopped Japan from planned attack of Australia

View of USS Lexingtons flight deck http//www.his
tory.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/coralsea/cora
lsea.htm
8
Battle of Midway
  • June 1942
  • 1st major Japanese defeat of the Navy
  • Turning Point of the War
  • Admiral Chester Nimitz
  • Commander of the American Naval Forces in the
    Pacific
  • flag ship the U.S.S. Missouri
  • U.S. intercepted Japanese message and ambushed
    them near Midway Island

http//www.nimitz-museum.org/nimitzbio.htm
U.S.S. Yorktown afire after being hit by Japanese
bombs http//www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/ww
ii-pac/midway/midway.htm
9
Guadalcanal
  • August 1942, U.S. Marines launched the 1st major
    Allied land offensive in the Pacific
  • Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands was a
    strategic location for air support
  • Called the Island of Death by the Japanese
  • Marked Japans first defeat on land
  • It kept Japan from being able to hit Allied
    shipping lanes and Allied held islands
  • Concluded in February 1943

10
Cairo Conference and Declaration
  • Nov. 1943
  • Meeting between Churchill, FDR, and Chiang
    Kai-Shek of China
  • Agree to terms of war concerning Japan
  • Unconditional Surrender
  • Deprive Japan of all territory acquired since
    1914
  • Return all land to China
  • Korea would be free and independent

11
U.S. Strategy in the Pacific
  • Leapfrogging
  • U.S. would jump from island to island, missing
    the more fortified ones, as they moved closer and
    closer to Japan

12
Yalta Conference
  • Feb. 1945
  • Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin (Big Three)
  • Met at Yalta Southern Crimea Peninsula on the
    Black Sea
  • Discuss Postwar Issues
  • At this time the outcome in Europe was
    predictable, but the war in the Pacific was very
    questionable

13
Yalta Agreement
  • Stalin agrees to enter the war against Japan 3
    months after German surrender in return for land
    in the Far East
  • For the Eastern half of Poland, Stalin agreed to
    free elections in Eastern Europe
  • Germany would be divided into 4 occupation zones
  • Berlin would also be divided
  • France and China would sponsor the conference to
    found the United Nations

14
Battle of Leyte Gulf
  • MacArthur returns to the Philippines in Oct. 1944
    with 178,000 troops and 738 ships
  • Japanese begin to use Kamikaze Pilots in this
    battle
  • Kamikaze Suicide plane
  • 424 Kamikaze pilots sank 16 ships and damaged 80
  • Battle a total disaster for the Japanese in that
    they lost most of their navy and would not be
    much of a threat for the rest of the war

15
Iwo Jima
  • Feb. 1945
  • U.S. needed Iwo Jima in order
  • to launch heavily loaded bombers at
  • Japan
  • Heavily defended by the Japanese
  • 20,700 Japanese troops entrenched
  • U.S. attacked with 70,000 Marines
  • U.S. death toll 6,000 Marines
  • Japanese death toll 20,500
  • (Only 200 survive)
  • Iwo Jima famous for the picture of U.S. troops
    raising the Flag on top of Mt. Suribachi

http//www.iwojima.com/raising/raisingb.htm
16
Okinawa
  • April 1945
  • Marines attack and 1,900 Kamikaze pilots sink 30
    ships, and damage more than 300
  • Once on shore the battle would last until June
    21, 1945
  • U.S. Causalities
  • 5,000 Seamen
  • 7,600 Troops
  • Japanese Causalities
  • 110,000 Troops
  • Showed the U.S. how terrible an invasion of the
    main islands of Japan would be

17
Manhattan Project
Click for Manhattan Project Site
http//www.cfo.doe.gov/me70/manhattan/index.htm
  • Project to develop an atomic bomb
  • J. Robert Oppenheimer Project Director
  • 600,000 Americans were involved in the project,
    but did not know its purpose
  • Very Top Secret
  • Project had started when Albert Einstein had sent
    a letter to Roosevelt warning him of German
    scientist attempts at splitting atoms

18
Using the Atomic Bomb
  • As the war still rages in the Pacific, experts
    predict that an invasion of Japan would result in
    1,000,000 U.S. lives and many more Japanese lives
  • A proposal to use this new destructive weapon is
    considered by Truman
  • Truman did not know about the Manhattan Project
    until after he became President

19
Atomic Bombs
  • Little Boy Uranium 235 Core
  • Fat Man 1 Plutonium Core (not sure it will
    work)
  • Fat Man 2 Created to Test

The actual Little Boy bomb ready to be loaded
aboard the Enola Gay.
The actual Fat Man bomb on Tinian.
http//www.atomicarchive.com/Photos/LBFM/index.sht
ml
20
Testing the Fat Man
See Video _at_ http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_t
est
  • July 1945
  • Alamogordo, New Mexico
  • Fat Man was detonated on a platform

http//nuclearweaponarchive.org/Usa/Tests/Trinity.
html
Assembly of Fat Man on platform
Trinity test site a few weeks after detonation.
21
Dropping the Bomb
  • The U.S. warned the Japanese that if they didnt
    surrender a destructive force would strike
  • Official Reason It would save more lives in the
    long run
  • Enola Gay B29 Bomber
  • Pilot Colonel Tibbets
  • Dropped the Little Boy on Hiroshima, August 6,
    1945

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enola_Gay
Check out Hiroshima site http//www.city.hiroshi
ma.jp/e/peace.html
http//www.enolagay.org/
22
Japan Doesnt Surrender
  • Fat Man dropped on Nagasaki on August 9, 1945
  • Real Reason for dropping the atomic bombs may
    have something to do the Soviet Union
  • Agreements made at the Yalta Conference
  • May 8, 1945 V-E Day
  • August 6, 1945 1st Bomb dropped
  • Why would the U.S. want to prevent Soviet
    participation in the Pacific?
  • What could we have done instead of dropping the
    bombs?

23
NagasakiBefore and After
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atomic_bombings_of_Hi
roshima_and_Nagasaki
Panoramic view of the monument marking the
hypocentre, or ground zero, of the atomic bomb
explosion over Nagasaki.
24
Japan Surrenders
  • September 2, 1945
  • Surrender signed aboard the U.S.S. Missouri
  • MacArthur and Nimitz present

25
Occupation of Japan
  • U.S. occupied Japan for seven years
  • General MacArthur commander
  • General Tojo and others were tried for war crimes
    and executed
  • Japans economy was reshaped using free-market
    practices
  • New Constitution Instituted
  • Women suffrage
  • Guaranteed basic freedoms
  • Forever denounce war

26
Casualty Map Each symbol indicates 100,000 dead
in the appropriate theater of operations
http//users.erols.com/mwhite28/ww2-loss.htm
27
Casualty Map Each symbol indicates 100,000 dead
in the appropriate theater of operations
http//users.erols.com/mwhite28/ww2-loss.htm
28
United Nations
http//www.un.org/english/
  • General Assembly
  • Security Council
  • Economic and Social Council
  • International Court of Justice
  • Trusteeship Council
  • Secretariat

http//users.erols.com/mwhite28/un.htm
29
General Assembly
  • Policy Making Body of the U.N.
  • All member nations belong
  • All member nations have 1 vote each

30
Security Council
  • Settles Diplomatic, Political, and Military
    Disputes
  • 5 permanent members
  • U.S.
  • United Kingdom
  • Russia
  • France
  • China
  • 11 members total (other 6 serve 2 year terms)

31
Other Bodies of U.N.
  • Economic and Social Council
  • 18 members
  • Deals with human welfare and fundamental rights
    and freedoms
  • Has many groups including UNICF and the World
    Bank
  • International Court of Justice
  • 15 Judges
  • Deal with questions and disputes of International
    Law
  • Trusteeship Council
  • Promotes welfare of people in colonial
    territories and help them toward self-government
  • Secretariat
  • Deal with the day-to-day organizational and
    administrative concerns

Organizational Chart of U.N. http//www.un.org/abo
utun/chart_en.pdf
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