WORLD WAR II 1939-1945
MAJOR COUNTRIES AND GROUPS INVOLVED
P-40 WarHawk
Picture 1 | Right rear view |
F6F Hellcat
Picture 1 | Right side view |
Picture 2 | Front view with wings folded |
B-25 Mitchell
Picture 1 | Top right view |
P-38 Lightning
Picture 1 | Top right front view |
Picture 2 | front left view |
Picture 3 | Front view |
Picture 4 | Rear view |
P-47 Thunderbolt
Picture 1 | Left rear view |
Picture 2 | Right side |
F4U-1A Corsair
Picture 1 | Front view |
P-51 Mustang
Picture 1 | Front right view |
DC-3
Picture 1 | BW photo |
B-24 J
Picture 1 | Rear gunner station |
SBD Dauntless
Picture 1 | Left rear view |
B-17
Picture 1 | Ball turret |
Picture 2 | Right side gun |
Picture 3 | Nose |
Picture 4 | Rear turret |
Picture 5 | Rear view |
Picture 6 | Full plane, left side view |
Grumman F3F
Picture 1 | Left front view |
ME-109 (BF-109)
Picture 1 | Vintage color photo of top left view |
Picture 2 | New color photo of top left view |
Stuka
Picture 1 | B/W photo of right side view |
Me-262
Picture 1 | B/W photo of left side view |
FW-190
Picture 1 | B/W top front right view |
Hurricane Mk. I
Picture 1 | Left side view |
Mosquito FB Mk-VI
Picture 1 | Right top view |
Spitfire Mk XIV
Picture 1 | Bottom left view |
A6M-5 Zero
Picture 1 | Top, right, rear view |
Coming Soon.
Macchi Veltro
Picture 1 | Right side view |
Coming Soon.
Coming Soon.
Coming Soon.
Coming Soon.
ABOUT THE WAR
The Second World War was by far, the costliest war ever. More lives were lost and more money was spent on that war alone than any combined three wars ever in history.
In the early morning hours of September 1, 1939, the German armies marched into Poland and thus began some of the darkest years in history. On September 3 the British and French surprised Hitler by declaring war on Germany, but they had no plans for rendering active assistance to the Poles.
Man for man, the German and Polish forces were an even match. Hitler committed about 1.5 million troops, and the Polish commander, Marshal Edward Smigly-Rydz, expected to muster 1.8 million. That was not the whole picture, however. The Germans had six panzer (armored) and four motorized divisions; the Poles had one armored and one motorized brigade and a few tank battalions. The Germans' 1600 aircraft were mostly of the latest types. Half of the Poles' 935 planes were obsolete.
Polish strategic doctrine called for a rigid
defense of the whole frontier and anticipated several weeks of preliminary
skirmishing. It was wrong on both counts. On the morning of September 1, waves of
German bombers hit the railroads and hopelessly snarled the Polish mobilization. In
four more days, two army groups—one on the north out of East Prussia, the other on
the south out of Silesia—had broken through on relatively narrow fronts and were
sending armored spearheads on fast drives toward Warsaw and Brest. This was
blitzkrieg (lightning war): the use of armor, air power, and mobile infantry in a
pincers movement to encircle the enemy.
Between September 8 and 10, the Germans closed in on Warsaw from the north and south,
trapping the Polish forces west of the capital. On September 17, a second, deeper
encirclement closed 160 km (100 mi) east, near Brest. On that day, too, the Soviet
Red Army lunged across the border. By September 20, practically the whole country was
in German or Soviet hands, and only isolated pockets continued to resist. The last to
surrender was the fortress at Kock, on October 6.
A French and British offensive in the west might have enabled Poland to fight longer, but until enough British arrived, it would have had to be mounted mainly by the French; French strategy, however, was defensive, based on holding the heavily fortified Maginot line. The quick finish in Poland left both sides at loose ends. Dismayed, the British and French became preoccupied with schemes to stave off a bloody replay of World War I. Hitler made a halfhearted peace offer and at the same time ordered his generals to ready an attack on the Low Countries and France. The generals, who did not think they could do against France what they had done in Poland, asked for time and insisted they could only take Holland, Belgium, and the French channel coast. Except at sea, where German submarines operated against merchant shipping and the British navy imposed a blockade, so little was going on after the first week in October that the U.S. newspapers called it the Phony War.
On November 30, after two months of
diplomatic wrangling, the Soviet Union declared war on Finland. Stalin was bent on
having a blitzkrieg of his own, but his plan faltered. The Finns, under Marshal Carl
G. Mannerheim, were expert at winter warfare. The Soviet troops, on the other hand,
were often badly led, in part because political purges had claimed many of the Red
Army's senior officers. Outnumbered by at least five to one, the Finns held their own
and kept fighting into the new year.
The attack on Finland aroused world opinion against the Soviet Union and gave an
opening to the British and French. They had long had their eyes on a mine at Kiruna
in northern Sweden that was Germany's main source of iron ore. In summer the ore went
through the Baltic Sea, in winter to the ice-free Norwegian port of Narvik and then
through neutral Norwegian waters to Germany. The Narvik-Kiruna railroad also
connected on the east with the Finnish railroads; consequently, an Anglo-French force
ostensibly sent to help the Finns would automatically be in position to occupy Narvik
and Kiruna. The problem was to get Norway and Sweden to cooperate, which both refused
to do.
In Germany, the naval chief, Admiral Erich Raeder, urged Hitler to occupy Norway for
the sake of its open-water ports on the Atlantic, but Hitler showed little interest
until late January 1940, when the weather and the discovery of some invasion plans by
Belgium forced him to delay the attack on the Low Countries and France indefinitely.
The first studies he had made showed that Norway could best be taken by simultaneous
landings at eight port cities from Narvik to Oslo. Because the troops would have to
be transported on warships and because those would be easy prey for the British navy,
the operation would have to be executed while the nights were long. Denmark, which
posed no military problems, could be usefully included because it had airfields close
to Norway.
Stalin, fearing outside intervention, ended
his war on March 8 on terms that cost Finland territory but left it independent. The
British and French then had to find another pretext for their projected action in
Narvik and Kiruna; they decided to lay mines just outside the Narvik harbor. This
they thought would provoke some kind of violent German reaction, which would let them
spring to Norway's side—and into Narvik.
Hitler approved the incursions into Norway and Denmark on April 2, and the warships
sailed on April 7. A British task force laid the mines the next morning and headed
home, passing the German ships without seeing them and leaving them to make the
landings unopposed on the morning of April 9. Denmark surrendered at once, and the
landings succeeded everywhere but at Oslo. There a fort blocked the approach from the
sea, and fog prevented an airborne landing. The Germans occupied Oslo by noon, but in
the meantime, the Norwegian government, deciding to fight, had moved to Elverum.
Although the Norwegians, aided by 12,000 British and French, held out in the area
between Oslo and Trondheim until May 3, the conclusion was never in doubt. Narvik was
different. There 4600 Germans faced 24,600 British, French, and Norwegians backed by
the guns of the British navy. The Germans had an advantage in the ruggedness of the
terrain and a greater one in their opponents' slow, methodical moves. Thus, they held
Narvik until May 28. In the first week of June they were backed against the Swedish
border and close to having to choose surrender or internment, but by then, military
disasters in France were forcing the British and French to recall their troops from
Narvik.
By spring, Hitler had found a new and better
way of handling the campaign against France and the Low Countries. The first plan had
been to have the main force go through Belgium, as it had in World War I. General
Erich von Manstein and some other advisers, however, had persuaded Hitler to shift
the main force south to the area of Luxembourg and the Ardennes Forest. The Ardennes
was hilly, wooded, and not the best country for tanks, but Manstein argued that the
enemy would not expect a big attack there. The tanks could make a fast northwestward
sweep from the Ardennes, behind the Belgians and British and part of the French.
After reaching the coast and defeating the enemy in Belgium, they could make an
about-face and strike to the southeast behind the French armies along the Maginot
line.
When the attack began, on May 10, 1940, the two sides were approximately equal in
numbers of troops and tanks; the Germans were superior in aircraft. The decisive
advantage of the Germans, however, was that they knew exactly what they were going to
do. Their opponents had to improvise, in part because the Belgians and Dutch tried to
stay neutral to the last. The British and French, moreover, had failed to learn from
the example of Poland, having attributed that country's defeat to its inherent
weakness. Consequently, they were not prepared to deal with the German armor. Their
tanks were scattered among the infantry; those of the Germans were drawn together in
a panzer group, an armored army.
On May 10 German airborne troops landed inside Belgium and Holland to seize airfields
and bridges and, most notably, the great Belgian fortress Eben-Emael. The Dutch army
surrendered on May 14, several hours after bombers had destroyed the business section
of Rotterdam. Also on May 14 the German main force, the panzer group in the lead,
came out of the Ardennes to begin the drive to the sea behind the British and French
armies supporting the Belgians.
On May 20 the panzer group took Abbeville at
the mouth of the Somme River and began to push north along the coast; it covered 400
km (250 mi) in 11 days. By May 26, the British and French were pushed into a narrow
beachhead around Dunkerque. The Belgian king, Leopold III, surrendered his army the
next day. Destroyers and smaller craft of all kinds rescued 338,226 men from
Dunkerque in a heroic sealift that probably would not have succeeded if the German
commander, General Gerd von Rundstedt, had not stopped the tanks to save them for the
next phase.
On June 5 the Germans launched a new assault against France. Italy declared war on
France and Britain on June 10. The Maginot line, which only extended to the Belgian
border, was intact, but the French commander, General Maxime Weygand, had nothing
with which to screen it or Paris on the north and west. On June 17, Marshal Henri
Philippe Pétain, a World War I hero who had become premier the day before, asked for
an armistice. The armistice was signed on June 25 on terms that gave Germany control
of northern France and the Atlantic coast. Pétain then set up a capital at Vichy in
the unoccupied southeast.
In the summer of 1940, Hitler dominated
Europe from the North Cape to the Pyrenees. His one remaining active enemy—Britain,
under a new prime minister, Winston Churchill—vowed to continue fighting. Whether
it could was questionable. The British army had left most of its weapons on the
beaches at Dunkerque. Stalin was in no mood to challenge Hitler. The U.S., shocked by
the fall of France, began the first peacetime conscription in its history and greatly
increased its military budget, but public opinion, although sympathetic to Britain,
was against getting into the war.
The Germans hoped to subdue the British by starving them out. In June 1940 they
undertook the Battle of the Atlantic, using submarine warfare to cut the British
overseas lifelines. The Germans now had submarine bases in Norway and France. At the
outset the Germans had only 28 submarines, but more were being built—enough to keep
Britain in danger until the spring of 1943 and to carry on the battle for months
thereafter.
Invasion was the expeditious way to finish off Britain, but that meant crossing the
English Channel; Hitler would not risk it unless the British air force could be
neutralized first. As a result, the Battle of Britain was fought in the air, not on
the beaches. In August 1940 the Germans launched daylight raids against ports and
airfields and in September against inland cities. The objective was to draw out the
British fighters and destroy them. The Germans failed to reckon with a new device,
radar, which greatly increased the British fighters' effectiveness. Because their own
losses were too high, the Germans had to switch to night bombing at the end of
September. Between then and May 1941 they made 71 major raids on London and 56 on
other cities, but the damage they wrought was too indiscriminate to be militarily
decisive. On September 17, 1940, Hitler postponed the invasion indefinitely, thereby
conceding defeat in the Battle of Britain.
In fact, Hitler had told his generals in
late July 1940 that the next attack would be on the USSR. There, he said, Germany
would get its "living space" and defeat Britain as well. He claimed the
British were only being kept in the war by the hope of a falling-out between Germany
and the USSR. When the Soviets had been defeated and British positions in India and
the Middle East were threatened, he believed that Britain would make peace. Hitler
wanted to start in the fall of 1940, but his advisers persuaded him to avoid the
risks of a winter campaign in the Soviet Union and wait until the spring.
Meanwhile, Germany's ally, Mussolini, had staged an unsuccessful attack (September
1940) on British-occupied Egypt from the Italian colony of Libya and an equally
abortive invasion (October 1940) of Greece. In response to the latter move, the
British occupied airfields on Crete (Kríti) and in Greece. Hitler did not want
British planes within striking distance of his one major oil source, the Ploiesti
fields in Romania, and in November he began to prepare an operation against Greece.
Early in 1941 British forces pushed the Italians back into Libya, and in February
Hitler sent General Erwin Rommel with a two-division tank corps, the Afrika Korps, to
help his allies.
Because he would need to cross their territory to get at Greece (and the Soviet
Union), Hitler brought Romania and Hungary into the Axis alliance in November 1940;
Bulgaria joined in March 1941. When Yugoslavia refused to follow suit, Hitler ordered
an invasion of that country.
The operations against Greece and Yugoslavia began on April 6, 1941. The Germans' primary difficulty with the attack on Yugoslavia was in pulling together an army of nine divisions from Germany and France in less than ten days. They had to limit themselves for several days to air raids and border skirmishing. On April 10 they opened drives on Belgrade from the northwest, north, and southeast. The city fell on April 13, and the Yugoslav army surrendered the next day. Yugoslavia, however, was easier to take than it would be to hold. Guerrillas—Cetniks under Draza Mihajlovic and partisans under Josip Broz (Tito)—fought throughout the war.
The Greek army of 430,000, unlike the
Yugoslav, was fully mobilized, and to some extent battle tested, but national pride
compelled it to try to defend the Metaxas line northeast of Salonika. By one short
thrust to Salonika, the Germans forced the surrender on April 9 of the line and about
half of the Greek army. After the Greek First Army, pulling out of Albania, was
trapped at the Metsóvon Pass and surrendered on April 22, the British force of some
62,000 troops retreated southward. Thereafter, fast German drives—to the Isthmus of
Corinth by April 27 and through the Pelopónnisos by April 30—forced the British
into an evacuation that cost them 12,000 men. An airborne assault on May 20-27 also
brought Crete into German hands.
Meanwhile, Rommel had launched a successful counteroffensive against the British in
Libya, expelling them from the country (except for an isolated garrison at Tobruk) by
April 1941.
In the year after the fall of France, the
war moved toward a new stage—world war. While conducting subsidiary campaigns in
the Balkans, in North Africa, and in the air against Britain, Hitler deployed his
main forces to the east and brought the countries of southeastern Europe (as well as
Finland) into a partnership against the USSR.
The U.S. abandoned strict neutrality in the
European war and approached a confrontation with Japan in Asia and the Pacific Ocean.
U.S. and British conferences, begun in January 1941, determined a basic strategy for
the event of a U.S. entry into the war, namely, that both would center their effort
on Germany, leaving Japan, if need be, to be dealt with later.
In March 1941 the U.S. Congress passed the Lend-Lease Act and appropriated an initial
$7 billion to lend or lease weapons and other aid to any countries the president
might designate. By this means the U.S. hoped to ensure victory over the Axis without
involving its own troops. By late summer of 1941, however, the U.S. was in a state of
undeclared war with Germany. In July, U.S. Marines were stationed in Iceland, which
had been occupied by the British in May 1940, and thereafter the U.S. Navy took over
the task of escorting convoys in the waters west of Iceland. In September President
Franklin D. Roosevelt authorized ships on convoy duty to attack Axis war vessels.
Meanwhile, American relations with Japan continued to deteriorate. In September 1940 Japan coerced Vichy France into giving up northern Indochina. The U.S. retaliated by prohibiting the exportation of steel, scrap iron, and aviation gasoline to Japan. In April 1941, the Japanese signed a neutrality treaty with the USSR as insurance against an attack from that direction if they were to come into conflict with Britain or the U.S. while taking a bigger bite out of Southeast Asia. When Germany invaded the USSR in June, Japanese leaders considered breaking the treaty and joining in from the east, but, making one of the most fateful decisions of the war, they chose instead to intensify their push to the southeast. On July 23 Japan occupied southern Indochina. Two days later, the United States, Britain, and the Netherlands froze Japanese assets. The effect was to prevent Japan from purchasing oil, which would, in time, cripple its army and make its navy and air force completely useless.
The war's most massive encounter began on
the morning of June 22, 1941, when slightly more than 3 million German troops invaded
the USSR. Although German preparations had been visible for months and had been
talked about openly among the diplomats in Moscow, the Soviet forces were taken by
surprise. Stalin, his confidence in the country's military capability shaken by the
Finnish war, had refused to allow any counteractivity for fear of provoking the
Germans. Moreover, the Soviet military leadership had concluded that blitzkrieg, as
it had been practiced in Poland and France, would not be possible on the scale of a
Soviet-German war; both sides would therefore confine themselves for the first
several weeks at least to sparring along the frontier. The Soviet army had 2.9
million troops on the western border and outnumbered the Germans by two to one in
tanks and by two or three to one in aircraft. Many of its tanks and aircraft were
older types, but some of the tanks, particularly the later famous T-34s, were far
superior to any the Germans had. Large numbers of the aircraft were destroyed on the
ground in the first day, however, and their tanks, like those of the French, were
scattered among the infantry, where they could not be effective against the German
panzer groups. The infantry was first ordered to counterattack, which was impossible,
and then forbidden to retreat, which ensured their wholesale destruction or capture.
For the invasion, the Germans had set up three army groups, designated as North,
Center, and South, and aimed toward Leningrad, Moscow, and Kyiv. Hitler and his
generals had agreed that their main strategic problem was to lock the Soviet army in
battle and defeat it before it could escape into the depths of the country. They
disagreed on how that could best be accomplished. Most of the generals believed that
the Soviet regime would sacrifice everything to defend Moscow, the capital, the hub
of the road and railroad networks, and the country's main industrial center. To
Hitler, the land and resources of the Ukraine and the oil of the Caucasus were more
important, and he wanted to seize Leningrad as well. The result had been a
compromise—the three thrusts, with the one by Army Group Center toward Moscow the
strongest—that temporarily satisfied Hitler as well as the generals. War games had
indicated a victory in about ten weeks, which was significant because the Russian
summer, the ideal time for fighting in the USSR, was short, and the Balkans
operations had caused a 3-week delay at the outset.
Ten weeks seemed ample time. Churchill offered the USSR an alliance, and Roosevelt
promised lend-lease aid, but after the first few days, their staffs believed
everything would be over in a month or so. By the end of the first week in July, Army
Group Center had taken 290,000 prisoners in encirclements at Bialystok and Minsk. On
August 5, having crossed the Dnieper River, the last natural barrier west of Moscow,
the army group wiped out a pocket near Smolensk and counted another 300,000
prisoners. On reaching Smolensk, it had covered more than two-thirds of the distance
to Moscow.
The Russians were doing exactly what the
German generals had wanted, sacrificing enormous numbers of troops and weapons to
defend Moscow. Hitler, however, was not satisfied, and over the generals' protests,
he ordered Army Group Center to divert the bulk of its armor to the north and south
to help the other two army groups, thereby stopping the advance toward Moscow. On
September 8 Army Group North cut Leningrad's land connections and, together with the
Finnish army on the north, brought the city under siege. On September 16 Army Group
South closed a gigantic encirclement east of Kyiv that brought in 665,000 prisoners.
Hitler then decided to resume the advance toward Moscow and ordered the armor be
returned to Army Group Center.
After a standstill of six weeks, Army Group Center resumed action on October 2.
Within two weeks, it completed three large encirclements and took 663,000 prisoners.
Then the fall rains set in, turning the unpaved Russian roads to mud and stopping the
advance for the better part of a month.
In mid-November, the weather turned cold and the ground froze. Hitler and the
commander of Army Group Center, Field Marshal Fedor von Bock, faced the choice of
having the armies dig in where they were or sending them ahead, possibly to be
overtaken by the winter. Wanting to finish the 1941 campaign with some sort of a
victory at Moscow, they chose to move ahead.
In the second half of November Bock aimed two armored spearheads at Moscow. Just
after the turn of the month, one of those, bearing in on the city from the northwest,
was less than 32 km (less than 20 mi) away. The other, coming from the south, had
about 65 km (about 40 mi) still to go. The panzer divisions had often covered such
distances in less than a day, but the temperature was falling, snow was drifting on
the roads, and neither the men nor the machines were outfitted for extreme cold. On
December 5 the generals commanding the spearhead armies reported that they were
stopped: The tanks and trucks were freezing up, and the troops were losing their will
to fight.
Stalin, who had stayed in Moscow, and his commander at the front, General Georgy
Zhukov, had held back their reserves. Many of them were recent recruits, but some
were hardened veterans from Siberia. All were dressed for winter. On December 6 they
counterattacked, and within a few days, the German spearheads were rolling back and
abandoning large numbers of vehicles and weapons, rendered useless by the cold.
On Stalin's orders, the Moscow counterattack was quickly converted into a
counteroffensive on the entire front. The Germans had not built any defense lines to
the rear and could not dig in because the ground was frozen hard as concrete. Some of
the generals recommended retreating to Poland, but on December 18 Hitler ordered the
troops to stand fast wherever they were. Thereafter, the Russians chopped great
chunks out of the German front, but enough of it survived the winter to maintain the
siege of Leningrad, continue the threat to Moscow, and keep the western Ukraine in
German hands.
The seeming imminence of a Soviet defeat in
the summer and fall of 1941 had created dilemmas for Japan and the U.S. The Japanese
thought they then had the best opportunity to seize the petroleum and other resources
of Southeast Asia and the adjacent islands; on the other hand, they knew they could
not win the war with the U.S. that would probably ensue. The U.S. government wanted
to stop Japanese expansion but doubted whether the American people would be willing
to go to war to do so. Moreover, the U.S. did not want to get embroiled in a war with
Japan while it faced the ghastly possibility of being alone in the world with a
triumphant Germany. After the oil embargo, the Japanese, also under the pressure of
time, resolved to move in Southeast Asia and the nearby islands.
Until December 1941 the Japanese leadership pursued two courses: They tried to get
the oil embargo lifted on terms that would still let them take the territory they
wanted, and they prepared for war. The U.S. demanded that Japan withdraw from China
and Indochina, but would very likely have settled for a token withdrawal and a
promise not to take more territory. After he became Japan's premier in mid-October,
General Tojo Hideki set November 29 as the last day on which Japan would accept a
settlement without war. Tojo's deadline, which was kept secret, meant that war was
practically certain.
The Japanese army and navy had, in fact, devised a war plan in which they had great
confidence. They proposed to make fast sweeps into Burma, Malaya, the East Indies,
and the Philippines and, at the same time, set up a defensive perimeter in the
central and southwest Pacific. They expected the United States to declare war but not
to be willing to fight long or hard enough to win. Their greatest concern was the
U.S. Pacific Fleet, based at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. If it reacted quickly, it could
scramble their very tight timetable. As insurance, the Japanese navy undertook to
cripple the Pacific Fleet by a surprise air attack.
A few minutes before 8 AM on Sunday, December 7, 1941, Japanese carrier-based
airplanes struck Pearl Harbor. In a raid lasting less than two hours, they sank or
seriously damaged eight battleships and 13 other naval vessels. The U.S. authorities
had broken the Japanese diplomatic code and knew an attack was imminent. A warning
had been sent from Washington, but, owing to delays in transmission, it arrived after
the raid had begun. In one stroke, the Japanese navy scored a brilliant success—and
assured the Axis defeat in World War II. The Japanese attack brought the U.S. into
the war on December 8—and brought it in determined to fight to the finish. Germany
and Italy declared war on the United States on December 11.
In the vast area of land and ocean they had marked for conquest, the Japanese seemed
to be everywhere at once. Before the end of December, they took British Hong Kong and
the Gilbert Islands (now Kiribati) and Guam and Wake Island (U.S. possessions), and
they had invaded British Burma, Malaya, Borneo, and the American-held Philippines.
British Singapore, long regarded as one of the world's strongest fortresses, fell to
them in February 1942, and in March they occupied the Netherlands East Indies and
landed on New Guinea. The American and Philippine forces surrendered at Bataan on
April 9, and resistance in the Philippines ended with the surrender of Corregidor on
May 6.
According to the Japanese plan, it would be time for them to take a defensive stance
when they had captured northern New Guinea (an Australian possession), the Bismarck
Archipelago, the Gilberts, and Wake Island, which they did by mid-March. But they had
done so well that they decided to expand their defensive perimeter north into the
Aleutian Islands, east to Midway Island, and south through the Solomon Islands and
southern New Guinea. Their first move was by sea, to take Port Moresby on the
southeastern tip of New Guinea. The Americans, using their ability to read the
Japanese code, had a naval task force on the scene. In the ensuing Battle of the
Coral Sea (May 7-8), fought entirely by aircraft carriers, the Japanese were forced
to abandon their designs on Port Moresby.
A powerful Japanese force, nine battleships and four carriers under Admiral Yamamoto
Isoroku, the commander in chief of the navy, steamed toward Midway in the first week
of June. Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, who had taken command of the Pacific Fleet after
Pearl Harbor, could only muster three carriers and seven heavy cruisers, but he was
reading the Japanese radio messages. Yamamoto, the architect of the Pearl Harbor
raid, had planned another surprise. This time, however, it was he who was surprised.
Off Midway, on the morning of June 4, U.S. dive-bombers destroyed three of the
Japanese carriers in one 5-minute strike. The fourth went down later in the day,
after its planes had battered the U.S. carrier Yorktown, which sank two days
later.
Yamamoto ordered a general retreat on June 5. On June 6-7 a secondary Japanese force took Kiska and Attu in the Aleutians, but those were no recompense for the defeat at Midway, from which the Japanese navy would never recover. Their battleships were intact, but the Coral Sea and Midway had shown carriers to be the true capital ships of the war, and four of those were gone.
In late December 1941 Roosevelt and Churchill and their chief advisers met in Washington. They reaffirmed the strategy of defeating Germany first, and because it appeared that the British would have all they could do fighting in Europe, the war against Japan became almost solely a U.S. responsibility. They also created the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS), a top-level British-American military committee seated in Washington, to develop and execute a common strategy. On January 1, 1942, the United States, the United Kingdom, the USSR, and 23 other countries signed the Declaration by United Nations in which they pledged not to make a separate peace. The United Nations became the official name for the anti-Axis coalition, but the term used more often was the Allies, taken over from World War I.
As a practical matter, the U.S. could not
take much action in Europe in early 1942. It had no troops there, and it was in the
midst of building forces and converting industry at home. In North Africa, the
British appeared to be more than holding their own. They had relieved Tobruk on
December 10, 1941, and taken Banghazi in Libya two weeks later. Rommel
counterattacked in late January 1942 and drove them back 300 km (185 mi) to al-Gazala
and Bir Hacheim, but there, well forward of Tobruk and the Egyptian border, a lull
set in.
The big question in the war was whether the USSR could survive a second German summer
offensive, and the Russians were urging the U.S. and Britain to relieve the pressure
on them by starting an offensive in the west. General George C. Marshall, the U.S.
Army chief of staff, believed the best way to help the Russians and bring an early
end to the war was to stage a buildup in England and attack across the English
Channel into northwestern Europe. He wanted to act in the spring of 1943, or even in
1942 if the USSR appeared about to collapse. The British did not want involvement
elsewhere until North Africa was settled and did not believe a force strong enough
for a cross-channel attack could be assembled in England by 1943. Rommel settled the
issue. In June he captured Tobruk and drove 380 km (235 mi) into Egypt, to Al 'Alamayn
(El 'Alamein). After that, the Americans agreed to shelve the cross-channel attack
and ready the troops en route to England for an invasion of French North Africa.
Meanwhile, despite the Germany-first strategy, the Americans were moving toward an
active pursuit of the war against Japan. The U.S. Navy saw the Pacific as an arena in
which it could perform more effectively than in the Atlantic or the Mediterranean.
General Douglas MacArthur, who had commanded in the Philippines and been evacuated to
Australia by submarine before the surrender, was the country's best-known military
figure and as such too valuable to be left with an inconsequential mission. The
Battle of Midway had stopped the Japanese in the central Pacific, but they continued
to advance in the southwest Pacific along the Solomons chain and overland on New
Guinea. On July 2, 1942, the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) directed the naval and
ground forces in the south and southwest Pacific to halt the Japanese, drive them out
of the Solomons and northeastern New Guinea, and eliminate the great base the
Japanese had established at Rabaul, on New Britain in the Bismarck Archipelago (now
in Papua New Guinea).
In the most immediately critical area of the war, the USSR, the initiative had passed
to the Germans again by summer 1942. The Soviet successes in the winter had been
followed by disasters in the spring. Setbacks south of Leningrad, near Kharkiv, and
in Crimea had cost well more than a half-million men in prisoners alone. The Germans
had not sustained such massive losses, but the fighting had been expensive for them
too, especially since the Soviets had three times the human resources at their
disposal. Moreover, Hitler's overconfidence had led him into a colossal error. He had
been so sure of victory in 1941 that he had stopped most kinds of weapons and
ammunition production for the army and shifted the industries to work for the air
force and navy, with which he proposed to finish off the British. He had resumed
production for the army in January 1942, but the flow would not reach the front until
late summer. Soviet weapons output, on the other hand, after having dropped low in
November and December 1941, had increased steadily since the turn of the year, and
the Soviet industrial base also was larger than the German.
Looking ahead to the summer, Hitler knew he could not again mount an all-out,
three-pronged offensive. Some of the generals talked about waiting a year until the
army could be rebuilt, but Hitler was determined to have the victory in 1942. He had
sufficient troops and weapons to bring the southern flank of the eastern front nearly
to full strength, and he believed he could compel the Soviet command to sacrifice its
main forces trying to defend the coal mines of the Donets Basin and the oil fields of
the Caucasus.
The offensive began east of Kharkiv on June
28, and in less than four weeks the armies had taken the Donets Basin and advanced
east to the Don River. The distances covered were spectacular, but the numbers of
enemy killed or captured were relatively small. Stalin and his generals had made the
luckiest mistake of the war. Believing the Germans were going to aim a second, more
powerful, attack on Moscow, they had held their reserves back and allowed the armies
in the south to retreat.
Hitler, emboldened by the ease and speed of the advance, altered his plan in the last
week of July. He had originally proposed to drive due east to Stalingrad, seize a
firm hold on the Volga River there, and only then send a force south into the
Caucasus. On July 23 he ordered two armies to continue the advance toward Stalingrad
and two to strike south across the lower Don and take the oil fields at Maikop,
Groznyy, and Baku.
The Russians appeared to be heading toward disaster, as the German thrust into the
Caucasus covered 300 km (185 mi) to Maikop by August 9. Hitler's strategy, however,
presented a problem: Two forces moving away from each other could not be sustained
equally over the badly damaged railroads of the occupied territory. In the second
half of August, he diverted more supplies to the attack toward Stalingrad, and the
march into the Caucasus slowed. Nevertheless, success seemed to be in sight when the
Sixth Army and Fourth Panzer Army (formerly group) closed near the Stalingrad suburbs
on September 3.
The USSR reached its low point in the war at the end of July 1942. The retreat was
almost out of hand, and the Germans were getting into position to strike north along
the Volga behind Moscow as well as into the Caucasus. On July 28 Stalin issued his
most famous order of the war, "Not a step back!" While threatening
Draconian punishments for slackers and defeatists, he relegated communism to the
background and called on the troops to fight a "patriotic" war for Russia.
Like Hitler, he had thus far conducted the war as he saw fit. In late August he
called on his two best military professionals, Zhukov, who had organized the Moscow
counteroffensive in December 1941, and the army chief of the General Staff, General
Aleksandr M. Vasilyevsky, to deal with the situation at Stalingrad. They proposed to
wear the enemy down by locking its troops in a bloody fight for the city while they
assembled the means for a counterattack.
The Axis was riding a high tide in midsummer 1942. Stalingrad and the Caucasus oil
were seemingly within Hitler's grasp, and Rommel was within striking distance of the
Suez Canal. The Japanese had occupied Guadalcanal at the southern end of the Solomons
chain and were marching on Port Moresby. Within the next six months, however, the
Axis had been stopped and turned back in the Soviet Union, North Africa, and the
southwest Pacific.
U.S. Marines landed on Guadalcanal on August 7, 1942. Against a small Japanese
garrison, the landing was easy. Afterward nothing was easy. The Japanese responded
swiftly and violently by sea and by air. The outcome hinged on the Japanese navy's
ability to bring in reinforcements, which was substantial, and the U.S. Navy's
ability to keep the marines supplied, which was at times in some doubt. While the
marines battled a determined foe in a debilitating tropical climate, between August
24 and November 30 the navy fought six major engagements in the waters surrounding
the island. The losses in ships and aircraft were heavy on both sides, but the
Japanese were more seriously hurt because they could not afford to accept a war of
attrition with the Americans. Their warships did not come out again after the end of
November, and the Americans declared the island secure on February 9, 1943.
The turnabout in North Africa began on
August 31, 1942, when Rommel attacked through the southern flank of the British line
west of Al 'Alamayn, was stopped at the 'Alam al Halfa' Ridge, and was thrown back by
September 7. The newly appointed British commander, General Bernard Law Montgomery,
hit the north flank on October 23 with a methodically prepared offensive and, by
November 5, forced Rommel into a retreat. American and British Troops fighting
together under General Dwight D. Eisenhower began landing in Morocco and Algeria on
November 8, the Americans at Casablanca and Oran, the British at Algiers. The Germans
sent reinforcements into Tunis and occupied all of France. They managed to get the
Fifth Panzer Army under General Jürgen von Arnim on the scene in time to stop
Eisenhower in western Tunisia by mid-December. Rommel went into the Mareth Line in
southeastern Tunisia in early February 1943 and launched an attack against the
Americans on February 14 that drove them back 80 km (50 mi) and out of the vital
Kasserine Pass. It was his last success and one he could not exploit. Hitler recalled
him in March, as the Americans and British closed in from the west and south. After
being cut off from their bases at Bizerte and Tunis and driven back into pockets on
the Cape Bon Peninsula, 275,000 Germans and Italians surrendered by May 13.
On the eastern front the Germans' advances to Stalingrad and into the Caucasus had
added about 1100 km (about 680 mi) to their line. No German troops were available to
hold that extra distance, so Hitler had to use troops contributed by his allies.
Consequently, while Sixth and Fourth Panzer armies were tied down at Stalingrad in
September and October 1942, they were flanked on the left and right by Romanian
armies. An Italian and a Hungarian army were deployed farther upstream on the Don
River. Trial maneuvers had exposed serious weaknesses in some of the Axis's armies.
On the morning of November 19, in snow and fog, Soviet armored spearheads hit the
Romanians west and south of Stalingrad. Their points met three days later at Kalach
on the Don River, encircling the Sixth Army, about half of the Fourth Panzer Army,
and a number of Romanian units. Hitler ordered the Sixth Army commander, General
Friedrich Paulus, to hold the pocket, promised him air supply, and sent Manstein, by
then a field marshal, to organize a relief. The airlift failed to provide the 300
tons of supplies that Paulus needed each day, and Manstein's relief operation was
halted 55 km (34 mi) short of the pocket in late December. The Sixth Army was doomed
if it did not attempt a breakout, which Hitler refused to permit.
The Russians pushed in on the pocket from three sides in January 1943, and Paulus
surrendered on January 31. The battle cost Germany about 200,000 troops. In the
aftermath of Stalingrad, in part owing to the collapse of the Italian and Hungarian
armies, the Germans were forced to retreat from the Caucasus and back approximately
to the line from which they had started the 1942 summer offensive.
From January 14 to 24, 1943, Roosevelt and
Churchill and their staffs met in Casablanca to lay out a strategy for the period
after the North African campaign. The American military chiefs wanted to proceed to
the direct, cross-channel assault on Germany. The British, eloquently spoken for by
Churchill, argued the advantages of gathering in the "great prizes" to be
had in the Mediterranean, in Sicily and Italy for a start. Roosevelt supported the
British, and the American military succeeded only (several months later) in getting
an agreement that no more troops would be put into the Mediterranean area than were
already there, all others being assembled in England for a cross-channel attack in
1944. Roosevelt gave his military another shock when he announced that nothing short
of unconditional surrender would be accepted from any of the Axis powers. The policy
was meant to reassure the Russians, who would have to wait at least another year for
a full-fledged second front, but was likely also to stiffen Axis resistance.
As a prelude to the postponed cross-channel attack, the British and Americans decided
at Casablanca to open a strategic air (bombing) offensive against Germany. In this
instance they agreed on timing but not on method. The British, as a result of
discouraging experience with daylight bombing early in the war, had built their heavy
bombers, the Lancasters and Halifaxes, for night bombing, which meant area bombing.
The Americans believed their B-17 Flying Fortresses and B-24 Liberators were armed
and armored heavily enough and were fitted with sufficiently accurate bombsights to
fly by daylight and strike pinpoint targets. The difference was resolved by letting
each nation conduct its own offensive in its own way and calling the result
round-the-clock bombing. The British method was exemplified by four firebomb raids on
Hamburg in late July 1943, in which much of the city was burned out and 50,000 people
died. American losses of planes and crews increased sharply as the bombers penetrated
deeper into Germany. After early October 1943, when strikes at ball-bearing plants in
Schweinfurt incurred nearly 25 percent losses, the daylight offensive had to be
curtailed until long-range fighters became available.
Before the winter fighting on the eastern front ended in March 1943, Hitler knew he
could not manage another summer offensive, and he talked about setting up an east
wall comparable to the fortified Atlantic wall he was building along the western
European coast. The long winter's retreat, however, had shortened the front enough to
give him a surplus of almost two armies. It also left a large westward bulge in the
front around the city of Kursk. To Hitler, the opportunity for one more grand
encirclement was too good to let pass.
After waiting three months for more new tanks to come off the assembly lines, Hitler opened the battle at Kursk on July 5 with attacks north and south across the open eastern end of the bulge. Zhukov and Vasilyevsky had also had their eyes on Kursk, and they had heavily reinforced the front around it. In the war's greatest tank battle, the Russians fought the Germans nearly to a standstill by July 12. Hitler then called off the operation because the Americans and British had landed on Sicily, and he needed to transfer divisions to Italy. With that, the strategic initiative in the east passed to the Soviet forces permanently.
Three American, one Canadian, and three
British divisions landed on Sicily on July 10. They pushed across the island from
beachheads on the south coast in five weeks, against four Italian and two German
divisions, and overcame the last Axis resistance on August 17. In the meantime,
Mussolini had been stripped of power on July 25, and the Italian government had
entered into negotiations that resulted in an armistice signed in secret on September
3 and made public on September 8.
On September 3 elements of Montgomery's British Eighth Army crossed the Strait of
Messina from Sicily to the toe of the Italian boot. The U.S. Fifth Army, under
General Mark W. Clark, staged a landing near Salerno on September 9; and by October
12, the British and Americans had a fairly solid line across the peninsula from the
Volturno River, north of Naples, to Termoli on the Adriatic coast. The Italian
surrender brought little military benefit to the Allies, and by the end of the year,
the Germans stopped them on the Gustav line about 100 km (about 60 mi) south of Rome.
A landing at Anzio on January 22, 1944, failed to shake the Gustav line, which was
solidly anchored on the Liri River and Monte Cassino.
Strategy in the war with Japan evolved by
stages during 1943. In the first, the goal was to secure bases on the coast of China
(from which Japan could be bombed and later invaded) by British and Chinese drives
through Burma and eastern China and by American thrusts through the islands of the
central and southwestern Pacific to Taiwan and China. By midyear, it was apparent
that neither the British nor the Chinese drive was likely to materialize. Thereafter,
only the two American thrusts remained. Their objectives were still Formosa and the
Chinese coast.
In the Pacific, U.S. troops retook Attu, in
the Aleutians, in a hard-fought, 3-week battle beginning on May 23. (The Japanese
evacuated Kiska before Americans and Canadians landed there in August.) The main
action was in the southwest Pacific. There U.S. and New Zealand troops, under Admiral
William Halsey, advanced through the Solomons, taking New Georgia in August and a
large beachhead on Bougainville in November. Australians and Americans under
MacArthur drove the Japanese back along the East Coast of New Guinea and took Lae and
Salamaua in September. MacArthur's and Halsey's mission, as set by the JCS in 1942,
had been to take Rabaul, but they discovered in the Solomons that having command of
the air and sea around them was enough to neutralize the Japanese Island garrisons
and render them useless. Landings on Cape Gloucester, New Britain, in December, in
the Admiralty Islands in February 1944, and At Emirau Island in March 1944
effectively sealed off Rabaul. Its 100,000-man garrison could not thereafter be
either adequately supplied or evacuated.
The central Pacific thrust was slower in getting started. The southwest Pacific
islands were relatively close together; airfields on one could furnish support for
the move to the next; and the Japanese navy was wary of risking its ships within
range of land-based aircraft. In the central Pacific, however, the islands were
scattered over vast stretches of ocean, and powerful naval forces were needed to
support the landings, particularly aircraft carriers, which were not available in
sufficient numbers until late 1943.
The first central Pacific landings were in the Gilbert Islands, at Makin and Tarawa
in November 1943. Betio Island in the Tarawa Atoll, 117.8 hectares (291 acres) of
coral sand and concrete and coconut log bunkers, cost the 2nd Marine Division 3000
casualties in three days. More intensive preliminary bombardments and larger numbers
of amphibian tractors capable of crossing the surrounding reefs made the taking of
Kwajalein and Enewetak in the Marshall Islands in February 1944 somewhat less
expensive.
After the Battle of Kursk, the last
lingering doubt about the Soviet forces was whether they could conduct a successful
summer offensive. It was dispelled in the first week of August 1943, when slashing
attacks hit the German line north and west of Kharkiv. On August 12 Hitler ordered
work started on an east wall to be built along the Narva River and Lakes Pskov and
Peipus, behind Army Group North, and the Desna and Dnieper rivers, behind Army Groups
Center and South. In the second half of the month, the Soviet offensive expanded
south along the Donets River and north into the Army Group Center sector.
On September 15 Hitler permitted Army Group South to retreat to the Dnieper River;
otherwise it was likely to be destroyed. He also ordered everything in the area east
of the Dnieper that could be of any use to the enemy to be hauled away, burned, or
blown up. This scorched-earth policy, as it was called, could only be partially
carried out before the army group crossed the river at the end of the month.
Henceforth, that policy would be applied in all territory surrendered to the
Russians.
Behind the river, the German troops found no trace of an east wall, and they had to
contend from the first with five Soviet bridgeheads. The high west bank of the river
was the best defensive line left in the Soviet Union, and the Soviet armies, under
Zhukov and Vasilyevsky, fought furiously to prevent the Germans from gaining a
foothold there. They expanded the bridgeheads, isolated a German army in Crimea in
October, took Kyiv on November 6, and stayed on the offensive into the winter with
hardly a pause.
At the end of November, Roosevelt and Churchill journeyed to Tehran for their first
meeting with Stalin. The president and the prime minister had already approved, under
the code name Overlord, a plan for a cross-channel attack. Roosevelt wholeheartedly
favored executing Overlord as early in 1944 as the weather permitted. At Tehran,
Churchill argued for giving priority to Italy and possible new offensives in the
Balkans or southern France, but he was outvoted by Roosevelt and Stalin. Overlord was
set for May 1944. After the meeting, the CCS recalled Eisenhower from the
Mediterranean and gave him command of the Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary
Forces (SHAEF), which was to organize and carry out Overlord.
The Tehran conference marked the high point of the East-West wartime alliance. Stalin
came to the meeting as a victorious war leader; large quantities of U.S. lend-lease
aid were flowing into the Soviet Union through Murmansk and the Persian Gulf; and the
decision on Overlord satisfied the long-standing Soviet demand for a second front. At
the same time, strains were developing as the Soviet armies approached the borders of
the smaller eastern European states. In May 1943 the Germans had produced evidence
linking the USSR to the deaths of some 11,000 Polish officers found buried in mass
graves in the Katyn Forest near Smolensk. Stalin had severed relations with the
Polish exile government in London, and he insisted at Tehran, as he had before, that
the postwar Soviet-Polish boundary would have to be the one established after the
Polish defeat in 1939. He also reacted with barely concealed hostility to Churchill's
proposal of a British-American thrust into the Balkans.
Hitler expected an invasion of northwestern Europe in the spring of 1944, and he
welcomed it as a chance to win the war. If he could throw the Americans and British
off the beaches, he reasoned, they would not soon try again. He could then throw all
of his forces, nearly half of which were in the west, against the USSR. In November
1943 he told the commanders on the eastern front that they would get no more
reinforcements until after the invasion had been defeated.
In January 1944 a Soviet offensive raised the siege of Leningrad and drove Army Group
North back to the Narva River-Lake Peipus line. There the Germans found a tenuous
refuge in the one segment of the east wall that had been to some extent fortified. On
the south flank, successive offensives, the last in March and April, pushed the
Germans in the broad stretch between the Poles'ye Marshes (Pripet Marshes) and the
Black Sea off of all but a few shreds of Soviet territory. The greater part of
150,000 Germans and Romanians in Crimea died or passed into Soviet captivity in May
after a belated sealift failed to get them out of Sevastopol'. On the other hand,
enough tanks and weapons had been turned out to equip new divisions for the west and
replace some of those lost in the east; the air force had 40 percent more planes than
at the same time a year earlier; and synthetic oil production reached its wartime
peak in April 1944.
On June 6, 1944, D-Day, the day of invasion for Overlord, the U.S. First Army, under
General Omar N. Bradley, and the British Second Army, under General Miles C. Dempsey,
established beachheads in Normandy (Normandie), on the French channel coast. The
German resistance was strong, and the footholds for Allied armies were not nearly as
good as they had expected. Nevertheless, the powerful counterattack with which Hitler
had proposed to throw the Allies off the beaches did not materialize, neither on
D-Day nor later. Enormous Allied air superiority over northern France made it
difficult for Rommel, who was in command on the scene, to move his limited reserves.
Moreover, Hitler became convinced that the Normandy landings were a feint and the
main assault would come north of the Seine River. Consequently, he refused to release
the divisions he had there and insisted on drawing in reinforcements from more
distant areas. By the end of June, Eisenhower had 850,000 men and 150,000 vehicles
ashore in Normandy.
The German eastern front was quiet during the first three weeks of June 1944. Hitler
fully expected a Soviet summer offensive, which he and his military advisers believed
would come on the south flank. Since Stalingrad the Soviets had concentrated their
main effort there, and the Germans thought Stalin would be eager to push into the
Balkans, the historic object of Russian ambition. Although Army Group Center was
holding Belorussia—the only large piece of Soviet territory still in German
hands—and although signs of a Soviet buildup against the army group multiplied in
June, they did not believe it was in real danger. On June 22-23, four Soviet army
groups, two controlled by Zhukov and two by Vasilyevsky, hit Army Group Center.
Outnumbered by about ten to one at the points of attack, and under orders from Hitler
not to retreat, the army group began to disintegrate almost at once. By July 3, when
Soviet spearheads coming from the northeast and southeast met at Minsk, the
Belorussian capital, Army Group Center had lost two-thirds of its divisions. By the
third week of the month, Zhukov's and Vasilyevsky's fronts had advanced about 300 km
(about 200 mi). The Soviet command celebrated on July 17 with a day-long march by
57,000 German prisoners, including 19 generals, through the streets of Moscow.
A group of German officers and civilians concluded in July that getting rid of Hitler
offered the last remaining chance to end the war before it swept onto German soil
from two directions. On July 20 they tried to kill him by placing a bomb in his
headquarters in East Prussia. The bomb exploded, wounding a number of
officers—several fatally—but inflicting only minor injuries on Hitler. Afterward,
the Gestapo
hunted down everyone suspected of complicity in the plot. One of the suspects was
Rommel, who committed suicide. Hitler emerged from the assassination attempt more
secure in his power than ever before.
As of July 24 the Americans and British were still confined in the Normandy
beachhead, which they had expanded somewhat to take in Saint-Lô and Caen. Bradley
began the breakout the next day with an attack south from Saint-Lô. Thereafter, the
front expanded rapidly, and Eisenhower regrouped his forces. Montgomery took over the
British Second Army and the Canadian First Army. Bradley assumed command of a newly
activated Twelfth Army Group consisting of U.S. First and Third armies under General
Courtney H. Hodges and General George S. Patton.
After the Americans had turned east from Avranches in the first week of August, a
pocket developed around the German Fifth Panzer and Seventh armies west of Falaise.
The Germans held out until August 20 but then retreated across the Seine. On August
25 the Americans, in conjunction with General Charles de Gaulle's Free French and
Resistance forces, liberated Paris.
Meanwhile, on August 15, American and French forces had landed on the southern coast
of France east of Marseille and were pushing north along the valley of the Rhône
River. They made contact with Bradley's forces near Dijon in the second week of
September.
Bradley and Montgomery sent their army
groups north and east across the Seine on August 25, the British going along the
coast toward Belgium, the Americans toward the Franco-German border. Montgomery's
troops seized Antwerp on September 3, and the first American patrols crossed the
German border on September 11. But the pursuit was ending. The German armies
shattered in the breakout were being rebuilt, and Hitler sent as commander Field
Marshal Walter Model, who had earned a reputation as the so-called lion of the
defense on the eastern front. Montgomery had reached formidable water barriers—the
Meuse and lower Rhine rivers—and the Americans were coming up against the west
wall, which had been built in the 1930s as the German counterpart to the Maginot
line. Although most of its big guns had been removed, the west wall's concrete
bunkers and antitank barriers would make it tough to crack. The Allies' most serious
problem was that they had outrun their supplies. Gasoline and ammunition in
particular were scarce and were being brought from French ports on the channel coast
over as much as 800 km (500 mi) of war-damaged roads and railroads. Until the port of
Antwerp could be cleared and put into operation, major advances like those in August
and early September were out of the question.
The Soviet offensive had spread to the flanks of Army Group Center in July. On July
29 a spearhead reached the Baltic coast near Riga and severed Army Group North's land
contact with the German main front. Powerful thrusts past Army Group Center's south
flank reached the line of the Wisla (Vistula) River upstream from Warsaw by the end
of the month. In Warsaw on July 31 the Polish underground Home Army commanded by
General Tadeusz Komorowski (known as General Bor) staged an uprising. The insurgents,
who were loyal to the anti-Communist exile government in London, disrupted the
Germans for several days. The Soviet forces held fast on the east side of the Wisla,
however, and Stalin refused to let U.S. planes use Soviet airfields for making supply
flights for the insurgents. He did, finally, allow one flight by 110 B-17s, which was
made on September 18. By then it was too late; the Germans had the upper hand; and
Komorowski surrendered on October 2. Stalin insisted that his forces could not have
crossed into Warsaw because they were too weak, which was probably not true. On the
other hand, the line of the Wisla was as far as the Soviet armies could go on a broad
front without pausing to replenish their supplies.
While the Soviet Union was letting the Warsaw uprising run its tragic course, it was
gathering in a plentiful harvest of successes elsewhere. An offensive between the
Carpathian Mountains and the Black Sea, opened on August 20, resulted in Romania's
asking for an armistice three days later. Bulgaria, which had never declared war on
the Soviet Union, surrendered on September 9, Finland on September 19. Soviet troops
took Belgrade on October 20 and installed a Communist government under Tito in
Yugoslavia. In Hungary, the Russians were at the gates of Budapest by late November.
The Italian campaign passed into the shadow of Overlord in the summer of 1944.
Clark's Fifth Army, comprising French and Poles as well as Americans, took Monte
Cassino on May 18. A breakout from the Anzio beachhead five days later forced the
Germans to abandon the whole Gustav line, and the Fifth Army entered Rome, an open
city since June 4. The advance went well for some distance north of Rome, but it was
bound to lose momentum because U.S. and French divisions would soon be withdrawn for
the invasion of southern France. After taking Ancona on the east and Florence on the
west coast in the second week of August, the Allies were at the German Gothic line.
An offensive late in the month demolished the Gothic line but failed in three months
to carry through to the Po River valley and was stopped for the winter in the
mountains.
Operations against Japan in the Pacific picked up speed in 1944. In the spring, the
JCS projected advances by MacArthur through northwestern New Guinea and into the
Philippines and by Nimitz across the central Pacific to the Marianas and Caroline
Islands. The Japanese, on their part, were getting ready for a decisive naval battle
east of the Philippines.
After making leaps along the New Guinea coast to Aitape, Hollandia, and Wakde Island
in April and May, MacArthur's troops landed on Biak Island on May 27. Airfields on
Biak would enable U.S. planes to harass the Japanese fleet in the Philippines. A
striking force built around the world's two largest battleships, Yamato and Musashi,
was steaming toward Biak on June 13 when the U.S. Navy began bombing and shelling
Saipan in the Marianas. The Japanese ships were then ordered to turn north and join
the First Mobile Fleet of Admiral Ozawa Jisaburo, which was heading out of the
Philippines toward the Marianas.
On June 19 and 20, Ozawa met U.S. Task Force 58, under Admiral Marc A. Mitscher, in
the Battle of the Philippine Sea. The outcome was decided in the air and under the
sea. Ozawa had five heavy and four light carriers; Mitscher had nine heavy and six
light carriers. On the first day, in what was called the Marianas Turkey Shoot, U.S.
fighters downed 219 of 326 Japanese planes sent against them. While the air battle
was going on, U.S. submarines sank Ozawa's two largest carriers, one of them his
flagship; and on the second day, dive-bombers sank a third big carrier. After that,
Ozawa steered north toward Okinawa with just 35 planes left. It was the end for
Japanese carrier aviation. Mitscher lost 26 planes, and 3 of his ships suffered minor
damage.
U.S. forces landed on Saipan on June 15. The
Americans had possession of Saipan, Tinian, and Guam by August 10, giving them the
key to a strategy for ending the war. The islands could accommodate bases for the new
American long-range bombers, the B-29 Superfortresses, which could reach Tokyo and
the other main Japanese cities at least as well from the islands as they would have
been able to from bases in China. Moreover, U.S. naval superiority in the Pacific was
rapidly becoming sufficient to sustain an invasion of Japan itself across the open
ocean. That invasion, however, would have to wait for the defeat of Germany and the
subsequent release of ground troops from Europe for use in the Pacific. The regular
bombing of Japan began in November 1944.
Although the shift in strategy raised some doubts about the need for the operations
in the Carolines and Philippines, they went ahead as planned, with landings in the
western Carolines at Peleliu (September 15), Ulithi (September 23), and Ngulu
(October 16) and in the central Philippines on Leyte (October 20). The invasion of
the Philippines brought the Japanese navy out in force for the last time in the war.
In the 3-day Battle for Leyte Gulf (October 23-25), the outcome of which was at times
more in doubt than the final result would seem to indicate, the Japanese lost 26
ships, including the giant battleship Musashi, and the Americans lost 7 ships.
The main action against Germany during the
fall of 1944 was in the air. Escorted by long-range fighters, particularly P-51
Mustangs, U.S. bombers hit industrial targets by day, while the German cities
crumbled under British bombing by night. Hitler had responded by bombarding England,
beginning in June, with V-1 flying bombs and in September with V-2 rockets; but the
best launching sites, those in northwestern France and in Belgium, were lost in
October. The effects of the Allied strategic bombing were less clear-cut than had
been expected. The bombing did not destroy civilian morale, and German fighter plane
and armored vehicle production reached their wartime peaks in the second half of
1944. On the other hand, iron and steel output dropped by half between September and
December, and continued bombing of the synthetic oil plants, coupled with loss of the
Ploiesti oil fields in Romania, severely limited the fuel that would be available for
the tanks and planes coming off the assembly lines.
The shortening of the fronts on the east and the west and the late year lull in the
ground fighting gave Hitler one more chance to create a reserve of about 25
divisions. He resolved to use them offensively against the British and Americans by
cutting across Belgium to Antwerp in an action similar to the sweep through the
Ardennes that had brought the British and French to disaster at Dunkerque in May
1940.
The German Ardennes offensive, soon to be known to the Allies as the Battle of the Bulge began on December 16. The Americans were taken completely by surprise. They put up a strong resistance, however, and were able to hold the critical road centers of Saint-Vith and Bastogne. The German effort was doomed after December 23, when good flying weather allowed the overwhelming Allied air superiority to make itself felt. Nevertheless, it was not until the end of January that the last of the 80-km (50-mi) deep "bulge" in the Allied lines was eliminated. The Allied advance into Germany was not resumed until February.
By then the Soviet armies were on the Odra (Oder)
River, 60 km (35 mi) east of Berlin. They had smashed the German line on the Wisla
River and reached the Baltic coast east of Danzig (Gdansk) in January 1945 and had a
tight hold on the Odra by February 3. Stalin would meet Roosevelt and Churchill at
Yalta in Crimea (February 4-11) with all of Poland in his pocket and with Berlin and,
for all anybody then knew, most of Germany as well within his grasp. At Yalta, Stalin
agreed to enter the war against Japan within three months after the German surrender
in return for territorial concessions in the Far East.
The Americans and British, as was their custom, disagreed on how to proceed against
Germany. In a meeting at Malta shortly before the Yalta conference, Montgomery and
the British members of the CCS argued for a fast single thrust by Montgomery's army
group across the north German plain to Berlin. To sustain such a thrust, they wanted
the bulk of Allied supplies to go to Montgomery, which meant the American armies
would have to stay on the defensive. Eisenhower's plan, which prevailed, was to give
Montgomery first priority but also keep the American armies on the move.
The first stage for all of the Allied armies was to reach the Rhine River. To
accomplish that, they had to break through the west wall in the south and cross the
Ruhr (Dutch Roer) River on the north. The Germans had flooded the Ruhr Valley by
opening dams. After waiting nearly two weeks for the water to subside, the U.S. Ninth
and First armies crossed the Ruhr on February 23.
In early March, the armies closed up to the Rhine. The bridges were down
everywhere—everywhere, that is, except at the small city of Remagen, where units of
the U.S. First Army captured the Ludendorff railroad bridge on March 7. By March 24,
when Montgomery sent elements of the British Second Army and the U.S. Ninth Army
across the river, the U.S. First Army was occupying a sprawling bridgehead between
Bonn and Koblenz. On March 22 the U.S. Third Army had seized a bridgehead south of
Mainz. Thus, the whole barrier of the river was broken, and Eisenhower ordered the
armies to strike east on a broad front.
Advancing at times over 80 km (over 50 mi) a
day, the U.S. First and Ninth armies closed an encirclement around the industrial
heart of Germany, the Ruhr, on April 1. They trapped 325,000 German troops in the
pocket. The British Second Army crossed the Weser River, halfway between the Rhine
and the Elbe rivers, on April 5. On April 11 the Ninth Army reached the Elbe near
Magdeburg and the next day took a bridgehead on the east side, thereby putting itself
within striking distance (120 km/75 mi) of Berlin.
The Ninth Army's arrival on the Elbe raised a question of a "race for
Berlin." The British, especially Churchill and Montgomery, and some Americans
contended that Berlin was the most important objective in Germany because the world,
and the German people especially, would regard the forces that took Berlin as the
real victors in the war. Eisenhower, supported by the JCS, insisted that, militarily,
Berlin was not worth the possible cost of taking it, and a junction with the Russians
could be made just as well farther south in the vicinity of Leipzig and Dresden.
Moreover, he believed Nazi diehards were going to take refuge in a redoubt in the
Bavarian mountains, and he wanted, therefore, to direct the main weight of his
American forces into south Germany.
The Soviet front, meanwhile, had remained stationary on the Odra River since
February, which raised another question. The postwar Soviet explanation was that
their flanks on the north and south were threatened and had to be cleared. The
sequence of events after February 1945 indicates that Stalin did not believe the
British and Americans could cross Germany as fast as they did and, consequently,
assumed he would have ample time to complete his conquest of eastern Europe before
heading into central Germany. Although he told Eisenhower differently, he obviously
did not regard Berlin as unimportant. In the first week of April, his armies went
into a whirlwind redeployment for a Berlin offensive.
Hitler's last, faint hope, strengthened briefly by Roosevelt's death on April 12, was
for a falling out between the Western powers and the Soviet Union. The East-West
alliance was, in fact, strained, but the break would not come in time to benefit Nazi
Germany. On April 14 and 16 the U.S. Fifth and British Eighth armies launched attacks
that brought them to the Po River in a week. The Soviet advance toward Berlin began
on April 16. The U.S. Seventh Army captured Nürnberg, the site of Nazi Party rallies
in the 1930s, on April 20. Four days later Soviet armies closed a ring around Berlin.
The next day the Soviet Fifth Guards Army and the U.S. First Army made contact at
Torgau on the Elbe River northeast of Leipzig, and Germany was split into two parts.
In the last week of the month, organized resistance against the Americans and British
practically ceased, but the German troops facing east battled desperately to avoid
falling into Soviet captivity.
Hitler decided to await the end in Berlin, where he could still manipulate what was
left of the command apparatus. Most of his political and military associates chose to
leave the capital for places in north and south Germany likely to be out of the
Soviet reach. On the afternoon of April 30 Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin
bunker. As his last significant official act, he named Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz to
succeed him as chief of state.
Doenitz, who had been loyal to Hitler, had no course open to him other than
surrender. His representative, General Alfred Jodl, signed an unconditional surrender
of all German armed forces at Eisenhower's headquarters in Reims early on May 7. By
then the German forces in Italy had already surrendered (on May 2), as had those in
Holland, north Germany, and Denmark (May 4). The U.S. and British governments
declared May 8 V-E (Victory in Europe) Day. The full unconditional surrender took
effect at one minute past midnight after a second signing in Berlin with Soviet
participation.
Although Japan's position was hopeless by
early 1945, an early end to the war was not in sight. The Japanese navy would not be
able to come out in force again, but the bulk of the army was intact and was deployed
in the home islands and China. The Japanese gave a foretaste of what was yet in store
by resorting to kamikaze (Japanese, "divine wind") attacks, or suicide air
attacks, during the fighting for Luzon in the Philippines. On January 4-13, 1945,
quickly trained kamikaze pilots flying obsolete planes had sunk 17 U.S. ships and
damaged 50.
While the final assault on Japan awaited reinforcements from Europe, the
island-hopping approach march continued, first, with a landing on Iwo Jima on
February 19. That small, barren island cost the lives of about 6800 U.S. personnel
(including about 6000 Marines) before it was secured on March 16. Situated almost
halfway between the Marianas and Tokyo, the island played an important part in the
air war. Its two airfields provided landing sites for damaged B-29s and enabled
fighters to give the bombers cover during their raids on Japanese cities.
On April 1 the U.S. Tenth Army, composed of four army and four marine divisions under
General Simon B. Buckner, Jr., landed on Okinawa, 500 km (310 mi) south of the
southernmost Japanese island, Kyushu. The Japanese did not defend the beaches. They
proposed to make their stand on the southern tip of the island, across which they had
constructed three strong lines. The northern three-fifths of the island were secured
in less than two weeks, the third line in the south could not be breached until June
14, and the fighting continued to June 21.
The next attack was scheduled for Kyushu in November 1945. An easy success seemed
unlikely. The Japanese had fought practically to the last man on Iwo Jima, and
hundreds of soldiers and civilians had jumped off cliffs at the southern end of
Okinawa rather than surrender. Kamikaze planes had sunk 15 naval vessels and damaged
200 off Okinawa.
The Kyushu landing was never made. Throughout the war, the U.S. government and the
British, believing Germany was doing the same, had maintained a massive scientific
and industrial project to develop an atomic bomb. The chief ingredients, fissionable
uranium and plutonium, had not been available in sufficient quantity before the war
in Europe ended. The first bomb was exploded in a test at Alamogordo, New Mexico, on
July 16, 1945.
Two more bombs had been built, and the possibility arose of using them to convince
the Japanese to surrender. President Harry S. Truman decided to allow the bombs to be
dropped. For maximum psychological impact, they were used in quick succession, one
over Hiroshima on August 6, the other over Nagasaki on August 9. These cities had not
previously been bombed, and thus the bombs' damage could be accurately assessed. U.S.
estimates put the number killed or missing as a result of the bomb in Hiroshima at
60,000 to 70,000 and in Nagasaki at 40,000. Japanese estimates gave a combined total
of 240,000. The USSR declared war on Japan on August 8 and invaded Manchuria the next
day.
On August 14 Japan announced its surrender, which was not quite unconditional because
the Allies had agreed to allow the country to keep its emperor. The formal signing
took place on September 2 in Tokyo Bay aboard the battleship Missouri. The Allied
delegation was headed by General MacArthur, who became the military governor of
occupied Japan. This peaceful gathering marked the end of probably the most
violent period throughout human history.
When all is tallied up the loss of human life due to the war is an estimated 60,000,000 individuals. That's about the equivalent of everyone in the United Kingdom today. The estimated money spent on the war is a total of 1 trillion.