america and wwii: the war for e urope and north africa

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America and WWII: The War for Europe and North Africa

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America and WWII: The War for E urope and North Africa. U.S. & Britain Join Forces. Prime Minister Winston Churchill and FDR meet on December 22, 1941 to plan the war #1 Allied Priority: The Defeat of Germany FDR always considered Hitler #1 enemy of the U.S. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

America and WWII:The War for Europe and North

Africa

Page 2: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

U.S. & Britain Join ForcesPrime Minister Winston Churchill and FDR meet on

December 22, 1941 to plan the war

#1 Allied Priority: The Defeat of Germany FDR always considered Hitler #1 enemy of the U.S.Stalin (now an Allied Power) was desperate for helpOnly after Germany was defeated could the U.S. look to

Britain and the Soviet Union for help in defeating Japan

Page 3: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

U.S. & Britain Join Forces

Also decided they would only accept the UNCONDITIONAL surrender of the Axis Powers

What would be the positives and

negatives to this decision?

Page 4: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Battle of the AtlanticAfter Pearl Harbor Hitler ordered submarine raids on

America’s East Coast 1st four months 87 U.S. ships sunkAfter 7 months 681 Allied ships sunk

Allies used the convoy system to protect the ships used destroyers with sonar to detect U-boats

With sonar the Allies destroyed U-boats faster than Germany could replace them

U.S. went on a crash ship-building program 140 ships/mo.By mid-1943 the Allies were winning the war in the Atlantic

Page 5: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Battle of Stalingrad Summer 1943 Allies began to see some victories German advance had stalled short of Leningrad and Moscow Hitler changed tactics:

1. Seize rich oil fields in the Caucasus MountainsCapture Stalingrad, a major industrial city

A brutal 3 month battle ensued with the Germans advancing house-by-house in brutal hand combat

End of Sept. 1943 9/10th of Stalingrad was German controlled

Page 6: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Battle of StalingradNovember 1943, Soviets launched a massive

counterattack Fighting continued into the winter German soldiers

froze/starved on the Russian frozen wastelandFeb. 2, 1943 the Germans surrendered

239,000 German soldiers died1,250,000 Soviet soldiers and civilians died

Despite the death toll, this was a major turning point in the war in the east Soviets pushed farther and father west toward Germany

Page 7: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

The North African FrontU.S. and Britain

opened a second front during the Battle of Stalingrad

Launched Operation Torch in Axis controlled N. Africa

This was led by General Dwight D. Eisenhower

Page 8: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

The North African Front

November 1942, 107,000 troops landed in North Africa

With the British also in pursuit, the Allies sped eastward chasing Hitler’s Afrika Korps led by General Erwin Rommel

After months of heavy fighting the last of the Afrika Korps surrendered in May 1943

Next step: Italy!

Page 9: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa
Page 10: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

The Italian Campaign Italy was considered the “soft underbelly of the Axis”Allies quickly captured Sicily (summer 1943)Italians were tired of war July 25, 1943 King Victor

Emmanuel III strips Benito Mussolini of power Mussolini arrested Italians celebrated

Hitler then seizes control of Italy and reinstalls Mussolini as its leader

After 18 months of fighting the Allies are able to drive the Germans from Italy

Page 11: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

The Italian CampaignWorst battle was

near Rome “Bloody Anzio”

Lasted 4 months25,000 Allies died30,000 Axis

soldiers died50,000 Italians

partisan fighters assisted the Allies

Page 12: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Allies Liberate EuropeGeneral Eisenhower

organized Operation Overlord planned invasion of Hitler’s fortress in Europe

Allies had been planning for over two years and building an invasion force of over 3 million troops to cross the English Channel

Page 13: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa
Page 14: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

D-Day: June 6, 1944Three divisions parachuted down behind German

enemy lines during the nightBritish, American, and Canadian troops fought their

way ashore at five points along a 60-mile stretch of beach

D-Day numbers:156,000 troops4,000 landing craft600 warships11,000 planes

Largest land-air-sea operation in history

Page 15: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

D-Day: June 6, 1944German fortresses bombed and shelled by air and sea

bombardment Allies still faced brutal retaliation from the German forces, Omaha Beach was the worst

Allies were able to hold the beachheadWithin a month they had landed:

1,000,000 troops, 567,000 tons of supplies, 170,000 vehicles

July 25th: General Omar Bradley launched an air attack at St.-Lo General Patton advances with troops

August 23rd they reach the Seine River, two days later Paris was liberated

Page 16: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Battle of the BulgeBy September 1944 France, Belgium,

Luxembourg, and most of the Netherlands had been liberated

October 1944 Americans captured the first German town Aachen

Surprise counterattack by the Germans broke through the 80 miles of Allied troops

The resulting dent from the desperate last-ditch offensive was nicknamed the “Battle of the Bulge”

Page 17: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa
Page 18: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Battle of the BulgeThe battle lasted for a month (Dec. 1944 – Jan.

1945)The Germans were pushed back and little seemed

to have changedHowever, the Germans had lost 120,000 troops,

600 tanks and assault guns, and 1,600 planesThese weapons and men could not be replacedGermans could do little except retreat

Page 19: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Liberation of the Death Camps

Allies were pushing eastward towards Germany, Soviets were pushing westward across Poland

Soviet troops were the first to come across the death camps in July 1944

Majdanek was the first killing center they came across

Page 20: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Unconditional SurrenderBy April 1945, the Soviet Army had stormed BerlinSoldiers deserted rapidly but were shot or hanged

on sightHitler was in his underground Berlin bunker in

his final written address he blamed the Jews for starting the war and his generals for losing it

Committed suicide by shooting himself his body and his wife’s were carried outside, soaked in gasoline, and burned (Hitler’s orders)

Page 21: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Unconditional Surrender One week later

General Eisenhower accepted the unconditional surrender of the Third Reich

May 8, 1945 the Allies celebrated V-E Day – Victory in Europe Day

The first part of the war was finally over…

Page 22: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

Despite racism, segregation, and denial of civil rights, many minorities served - All knew life in an Axis-controlled country would be much worse

Above are members of the all Japanese-American 442nd Regimental Combat Team. They served in Europe and won more medals than any other unit in the war.

Page 23: America and WWII: The War for  E urope and North Africa

The most famous all black unit was the 332nd Pursuit Squadron (better known as the Tuskegee Airmen)

Shot down over 100 German planes during war