by ezzat amier
The instability created in Europe by the First World War (1914-18) set the stage for another international conflict–World War II–which broke out two decades later and would prove even more devastating. Rising to power in an economically and politically unstable Germany, Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist (Nazi Party) rearmed the nation and signed strategic treaties with Italy and Japan to further his ambitions of world domination. Hitler’s invasion of Poland in September 1939 drove Great Britain and France to declare war on Germany, and World War II had begun. Over the next six years, the conflict would take more lives and destroy more land and property around the globe than any previous war. Among the estimated 45-60 million people killed were 6 million Jews murdered in Nazi concentration camps as part of Hitler’s diabolical “Final Solution,” now known as the Holocaust.
The instability created in Europe by the First World War (1914-18) set the stage for another international conflict–World War II–which broke out two decades later and would prove even more devastating. Rising to power in an economically and politically unstable Germany, Adolf Hitler and his National Socialist (Nazi Party) rearmed the nation and signed strategic treaties with Italy and Japan to further his ambitions of world domination. Hitler’s invasion of Poland in September 1939 drove Great Britain and France to declare war on Germany, and World War II had begun. Over the next six years, the conflict would take more lives and destroy more land and property around the globe than any previous war. Among the estimated 45-60 million people killed were 6 million Jews murdered in Nazi concentration camps as part of Hitler’s diabolical “Final Solution,” now known as the Holocaust.
LEADING UP TO WORLD
WAR II
The
devastation of the Great War (as World
War I was known at the time) had greatly destabilized
Europe, and in many respects World
War II grew out of issues left unresolved by that earlier
conflict. In particular, political and economic instability in Germany, and
lingering resentment over the harsh terms imposed by the Versailles Treaty,
fueled the rise to power of Adolf Hitler and
his National Socialist (Nazi) Party.
After
becoming Reich Chancellor in 1933, Hitler swiftly consolidated power, anointing
himself Führer (supreme leader) in 1934. Obsessed with the idea of the
superiority of the “pure” German race, which he called “Aryan,” Hitler believed
that war was the only way to gain the necessary “Lebensraum,” or living space,
for that race to expand. In the mid-1930s, he began the rearmament of Germany,
secretly and in violation of the Versailles Treaty. After signing alliances with
Italy and Japan against the Soviet Union, Hitler sent troops to occupy Austria
in 1938 and the following year annexed Czechoslovakia. Hitler’s open aggression
went unchecked, as the United States and Soviet Union were concentrated on
internal politics at the time, and neither France nor Britain (the two other
nations most devastated by the Great War) were eager for confrontation.
OUTBREAK OF WORLD
WAR II (1939)
In
late August 1939, Hitler and Soviet leader Joseph
Stalin signed the German-Soviet Nonaggression Pact,
which incited a frenzy of worry in London and Paris. Hitler had long planned an
invasion of Poland, a nation to which Great Britain and France had guaranteed
military support if it was attacked by Germany. The pact with Stalin meant that
Hitler would not face a war on two fronts once he invaded Poland, and would
have Soviet assistance in conquering and dividing the nation itself. On
September 1, 1939, Hitler invaded Poland from the west; two days later, France
and Britain declared war on Germany, beginning World War II.
On
September 17, Soviet troops invaded Poland from the east. Under attack from both
sides, Poland fell quickly, and by early 1940 Germany and the Soviet Union had
divided control over the nation, according to a secret protocol appended to the
Nonaggression Pact. Stalin’s forces then moved to occupy the Baltic States
(Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania) and defeated a resistant Finland in the
Russo-Finish War. During the six months following the invasion of Poland, the
lack of action on the part of Germany and the Allies in the west led to talk in
the news media of a “phony war.” At sea, however, the British and German navies
faced off in heated battle, and lethal German U-boat submarines struck at
merchant shipping bound for Britain, sinking more than 100 vessels in the first
four months of World War II.
WORLD WAR II IN THE
WEST (1940-41)
On
April 9, 1940, Germany simultaneously invaded Norway and occupied Denmark, and
the war began in earnest. On May 10, German forces swept through Belgium and
the Netherlands in what became known as “blitzkrieg,” or lightning war. Three
days later, Hitler’s troops crossed the Meuse River and struck French forces at
Sedan, located at the northern end of the Maginot Line,
an elaborate chain of fortifications constructed after World War I and
considered an impenetrable defensive barrier. In fact, the Germans broke
through the line with their tanks and planes and continued to the rear,
rendering it useless. The British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was evacuated by
sea from Dunkirk in late May, while in the south French forces mounted a doomed
resistance. With France on the verge of collapse, Benito Mussolini of
Italy put his Pact of Steel with Hitler into action, and Italy declared war
against France and Britain on June 10.
On
June 14, German forces entered Paris; a new government formed by Marshal
Philippe Petain (France’s hero of World War I) requested an armistice two
nights later. France was subsequently divided into two zones, one under German
military occupation and the other under Petain’s government, installed at
Vichy. Hitler now turned his attention to Britain, which had the defensive
advantage of being separated from the Continent by the English Channel. To pave
the way for an amphibious invasion (dubbed Operation Sea Lion), German planes
bombed Britain extensively throughout the summer of 1940, including night raids
on London and other industrial centers that caused heavy civilian casualties
and damage. The Royal Air Force (RAF) eventually defeated the Luftwaffe (German
Air Force) in the Battle of Britain,
and Hitler postponed his plans to invade. With Britain’s defensive resources
pushed to the limit, Prime Minister Winston Churchill began receiving crucial
aid from the U.S. under the Lend-Lease Act,
passed by Congress in early 1941.
OPERATION BARBAROSSA
(1941-42)
By
early 1941, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria had joined the Axis, and German
troops overran Yugoslavia and Greece that April. Hitler’s conquest of the
Balkans was a precursor for his real objective: an invasion of the Soviet
Union, whose vast territory would give the German master race the “Lebensraum”
it needed. The other half of Hitler’s strategy was the extermination of the
Jews from throughout German-occupied Europe. Plans for the “Final Solution”
were introduced around the time of the Soviet offensive, and over the next
three years more than 4 million Jews would perish in the death camps
established in occupied Poland.
On
June 22, 1941, Hitler ordered the invasion of the Soviet Union, codenamed Operation Barbarossa.
Though Soviet tanks and aircraft greatly outnumbered the Germans’, their air
technology was largely obsolete, and the impact of the surprise invasion helped
Germans get within 200 miles of Moscow by mid-July. Arguments between Hitler
and his commanders delayed the next German advance until October, when it was
stalled by a Soviet counteroffensive and the onset of harsh winter weather.
WORLD WAR II IN THE
PACIFIC (1941-43)
With
Britain facing Germany in Europe, the United States was the only nation capable
of combating Japanese aggression, which by late 1941 included an expansion of
its ongoing war with China and the seizure of European colonial holdings in the
Far East. On December 7, 1941, 360 Japanese aircraft attacked the major U.S.
naval base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, taking the Americans completely by surprise
and claiming the lives of more than 2,300 troops. The attack on Pearl Harbor
served to unify American public opinion in favor of entering World War II, and
on December 8 Congress declared war on Japan with only one dissenting vote.
Germany and the other Axis Powers promptly declared war on the United States.
After
a long string of Japanese victories, the U.S. Pacific Fleet won the Battle of Midway in
June 1942, which proved to be a turning point in the war. On Guadalcanal, one
of the southern Solomon Islands, the Allies also had success against Japanese
forces in a series of battles from August 1942 to February 1943, helping turn
the tide further in the Pacific. In mid-1943, Allied naval forces began an
aggressive counterattack against Japan, involving a series of amphibious
assaults on key Japanese-held islands in the Pacific. This “island-hopping”
strategy proved successful, and Allied forces moved closer to their ultimate
goal of invading the Japanese homeland.
TOWARD ALLIED
VICTORY IN WORLD WAR II (1943-45)
In
North Africa, British and American forces had defeated the Italians and Germans
by 1943. An Allied invasion of Sicily and Italy followed, and Mussolini’s
government fell in July 1943, though Allied fighting against the Germans in
Italy would continue until 1945.
On
World War II’s Eastern Front, a Soviet counteroffensive launched in November
1942 ended the bloody Battle of Stalingrad,
which had seen some of the fiercest combat of the war. The approach of winter,
along with dwindling food and medical supplies, spelled the end for German
troops there, and the last of them surrendered on January 31, 1943.
On
June 6, 1944–celebrated as “D-Day”–the Allied began a massive invasion of
Europe, landing 156,000 British, Canadian and American soldiers on the beaches
of Normandy, France. In response, Hitler poured all the remaining strength of
his army into Western Europe, ensuring Germany’s defeat in the east. Soviet
troops soon advanced into Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Romania, while
Hitler gathered his forces to drive the Americans and British back from Germany
in the Battle of the Bulge (December
1944-January 1945), the last major German offensive of the war. An intensive
aerial bombardment in February 1945 preceded the Allied land invasion of
Germany, and by the time Germany formally surrendered on May 8, Soviet forces
had occupied much of the country. Hitler was already dead, having committed
suicide on April 30 in his Berlin bunker.
WORLD WAR II ENDS
(1945)
At
the Potsdam Conference of
July-August 1945, U.S. President Harry S. Truman (who had taken office after
Roosevelt’s death in April), Churchill and Stalin discussed the ongoing war
with Japan as well as the peace settlement with Germany. Post-war Germany would
be divided into four occupation zones, to be controlled by the Soviet Union,
Britain, the United States and France. On the divisive matter of Eastern
Europe’s future, Churchill and Truman acquiesced to Stalin, as they needed
Soviet cooperation in the war against Japan. Heavy casualties sustained in the
campaigns at Iwo Jima (February 1945) and Okinawa (April-June 1945), and fears
of the even costlier land invasion of Japan led Truman to authorize the use of
a new and devastating weapon–the atomic bomb–on the Japanese cities of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki in early August. On August 10, the Japanese government
issued a statement declaring they would accept the terms of the Potsdam
Declaration, and on September 2, U.S. General Douglas MacArthur accepted Japan’s formal surrender
aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
World
War II proved to be the most devastating international conflict in history,
taking the lives of some 35 to 60 million people, including 6 million Jews who
died at the hands of the Nazis. Millions more were injured, and still more lost
their homes and property. The legacy of the war would include the spread of
communism from the Soviet Union into eastern Europe as well as its eventual
triumph in China, and the global shift in power from Europe to two rival
superpowers–the United States and the Soviet Union–that would soon face off
against each other in the Cold
War.
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