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World War 2

The document outlines significant battles and events of World War II, starting with the German Blitzkrieg invasion of France in May 1940, leading to the Dunkirk evacuation. It details key moments such as the Battle of Britain, the Lend Lease agreement, Operation Barbarossa, and the eventual defeat of Germany and Japan, culminating in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. Additionally, it discusses the protective measures taken in British cities against air attacks during the war.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views11 pages

World War 2

The document outlines significant battles and events of World War II, starting with the German Blitzkrieg invasion of France in May 1940, leading to the Dunkirk evacuation. It details key moments such as the Battle of Britain, the Lend Lease agreement, Operation Barbarossa, and the eventual defeat of Germany and Japan, culminating in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. Additionally, it discusses the protective measures taken in British cities against air attacks during the war.

Uploaded by

pengsan04
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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World War 2

Significant battles and events of WWII


May 1940 - Blitzkrieg
General Erich von Manstein lead German armies invade France in a new
and bold plan

Concentrating all tanks in powerful Panzer or armored divisions + dive


bombing aircrafts

Completely surprised the British and French

Tanks smashed through the Ardennes forest, crossed the River Meuse,
drove on to the sea

French armies in north were split, trapped and demoralized

British lost faith in their ally and prepared to evacuate them in their only port
remaining in their control - Dunkirk

They had done what the Kaiser’s armies in WWI couldn’t do - smashing
through enemy’s lines at minimal cost

Blitzkrieg → Lightning war

May → June 1940 - Dunkirk


Between 27 May and 4 June 1940, 338,000 British and French troops were
evacuated to Britain from the beaches of Dunkirk in France

British appealed for owners of small boats to sail to France, to the waiting
large ships of the Royal Navy

British soldiers were forced to leave behind almost all of their equipment

France surrendered on 25 June

German forces were now only 22 miles from Britain

Dunkirk was a defeat and humiliation for British and France

July → September 1940 - The Battle of Britain

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Goering → Reichsmarschall of Hitler’s air force

Boasted he could bomb Britain into surrender after the Dunkirk Evacuation

Bombed Britain with planes in broad daylight

However British RAF (Royal Air Force) was underestimated

RAF’s modern fighter planes were flown by pilots of many nations

All were directed clearly by radar against the German formations

RAF had no problem with fuel supply, however the German could only
stay over London for 10 minutes before their fuel became dangerously
low

Goering nearly won

His attacks still seriously damaged the RAF’s ability to continue fighting

It was only Hitler’s order to focus the bombing attacks on London that
perhaps saved Britain

End of 1940, 13,596 Londoners died but RAF was still able to fight on

September 15, 56 German planes were shot down and Goering had to
abandon daylight bombing

In conclusion, Germany had tried to force a British surrender but failed

February 1941 - Lend Lease


President Roosevelt managed to get US congress (even though US is a
neutral country) to agree to supply weapons, industrial equipment and
supplies to Britain on a credit agreement known as Lend Lease

Lend Lease → Britain would be supplied with ammunition etc. by US


factories immediately but would only have to pay after the war was won

Britain (and after the USSR) was able to gain access over 50 billion dollars
worth of goods

17 million rifles

315,000 cannons

87,000 tanks

2,434,000 motor vehicles

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296,000 planes

Britain was never short of equipment after Lend Lease as USA was the
most dominant industrial power in the world

June 1941 - Operation Barbarossa


Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union

Hitler signed a pact of friendship with communist Soviet Union in August


1939, to allow himself a free hand in attacking Poland

Many were surprised as Hitler hated communism, a Jewish idea he saw


as

By 1941 Hitler felt powerful enough to move against communism

A German force of 3 million men invaded Russia in June 1941 without


warning

Soviets were surprised and unprepared, resulting in retreating the fast


progressed chaos

Winter 1941 the German forces had taken a million prisoners and were at
the gates of Moscow

Germany had also capture huge amounts of rich agricultural land and
destroyed much of Russia’s industry

Russia couldn’t prevent this collapse

May 1941 → June 1942 - Greece, Yugoslavia, North


Africa invaded
Germany + Italy invaded Yugoslavia and later attacked Greece

Greek army and the British and Empire troops came in support but defeated

Huge amounts of equipment were lost as British troops evacuated by


sea

German troops were under the famous General Rommel and landed in
North Africa, advancing rapidly towards Egypt, which was controlled by
British

Germans would gain control of vast oil reserves and (by capturing the
Suez Canal) could cut off Britain from its Eastern empire and India

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In June 1942 the British fortress of Tobruk fell to the Germans

The road to Egypt was wide open and German forces seemed unstoppable

December 1941 - Pearl Harbor


Japan emerged as a growing industrial power in the first 3 decades of the
20th century, looking to expand and gain control of East Asia

Japan had been taking advantage of China’s weakness and had been
fighting a brutal war for territory with that country since 1931

France and Netherlands were occupied by Nazi Germany; Britain fighting


for its own life

Japan took advantage of this by occupying French Indo-China (Vietnam)

USA responded by refusing to supply Japan with oil

Japan signed an alliance with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy on 27


September 1941

7 December 1941, while talks with USA where still in progress, Japan
attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbor without warning

It was a peaceful Sunday morning and the US fleet was far from on full
alert

4 battleships sunk

28 ships damaged

2,350 dead

USA responded by declaring war on Japan

However US public weren’t convinced that they should fight Germany and
Japan at the same time

Luckily Adolf Hitler solved the problem by declaring war on the USA just to
help Japan tackle the problem

He was now in war with world’s largest empire - Britain; largest country
- USSR; richest country - USA

Early 1942 the Japanese had taken over much of the Pacific with its rich
resources

They were about to invade India and Australia

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US and British forces were in retreat everywhere

October 1942 - El Alamein


General Rommel had come very close to defeating the British and Empire
troops in North Africa, with good equipment, fighting skill and dedication

Autumn 1942, Rommel stopped 150 miles west of Cairo as his men were
exhausted and his equipment went short or wore out as the Royal Navy in
the Mediterranean had cut off much of his supplies

During Rommel’s weakness, British Army’s strength was increasing as loads


of ammunition arrive through Lend Lease

General Montgomery, a new and confident commander, was appointed as


commander of the British and Empire troops of the 8th army

By now is 2x strong in men and 3x strong in tanks as Rommel’s army

Rommel’s men were sent into retreat as a brilliantly planned attack through
minefields was executed

The Germans were trapped between the British and Empire troops
advancing from El Alamein + US army advancing from Tunisia

275,000 German troops surrendered, but Rommel escaped back to


Germany

British route to India + Oil supplies of the Middle east were safe from
German control

1941 → 1943 - The Battle of the Atlantic


Germans realized that Britain’s sea supply lines and trade routes were very
vulnerable to attack

At the start of the war, they were poorly prepared with only 20 U-boats and
crews

The fleet was expanded quickly and organized to attack convoys of


ships going to and from Britain, using the bases on the French Atlantic
coast

U-boats learned to avoid British detection devices by attacking on the


surface

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Low profile, very hard to pick out in the storm grey Atlantic Ocean

Over 700,000 tones of shipping and cargoes were lost in April 1941

It seemed as if Britain’s economy would collapse and starve into surrender

By autumn 1941 large numbers of US warships joined British ships on


convoy protection duty

Use of radar helped ships and newly developed long range aircraft to spot
U-boats more easily

U-boats were effectively defeated by the end of 1943, around 90% of men
who served in U-boats died

September 1942 → February 1943 - Stalingrad


Spring 1942, German armies moved forward in the USSR

Hitler ordered his famous 6th Army to take the city of Stalingrad

Named after the Soviet leader himself but also a major industrial center
+ protected vital oil supplies in the Caucuses

In the end, the German army found itself surrounded and cut off from help
just as winter set in

Over 90,000 German soldiers surrendered after 3 months

More German equipment was lost in this battle than was possessed by the
entire British army

From this point on there was never less than 65% of the whole German
army fighting the Russians, the British and Americans were facing the other
35%

July 1943 - The Battle of Kursk


Hitler threw his latest generation of tanks into a desperate attack against
the Soviets

Furious because off the defeat at Stalingrad, and in attempt to capture


Kursk (city)

Soviets had been warned by British code breakers that an attack was soon
and had found the exact date of the attack from German prisoners

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Even though advised not to by his generals, Hitler launched 2,700 tanks at
the Russians, which were countered with over 3000 (though smaller) tanks
of their own

This was the largest tank battle

Many new German tanks broke down and many more smashed by the
Soviet defense lines, the attack failed completely

Germany lost so many men and tanks that it was never again in a position to
call an attack in the east

After Kursk, the Germans were in steady retreat towards Germany

End of 1943 Soviet troops had crossed the Polish border

1943 → 1945 - The Burma Campaign


Japan had seized the whole Burma and begun to advance towards India by
June 1942

They seemed invincible in jungle warfare

Fighting took place in dreadful conditions

Malaria and other diseases were as much of a hazard to life as wounds


caused in battle

However, with coordinated attacks and inspired leadership, combined


operations between British and Indian troops + US + Chinese + some Dutch
forces, began to drive the Japanese back

The Japanese lost around 144,000 men defending Burma

6 June 1944 - D-Day


Stalin, Soviet leader, had been pressing for the British and Americans to
invade German-occupied France

Soviets advance in east, British and Americans advance in west, this


would squash the German armies from both sides and would take
considerable pressure off the hard-pressured Soviet armies

Invasion of France was hard as the coast was heavily defended by 1944

A successful invasion would require transporting large number of


troops across and unpredictable English Channel and landing them in

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sufficient strength to stand up to German counter attacks

6 June 1944, 4000 allied ships 156,000 British, American, Canadian and
French soldiers on the coast of France

Resistance was tough but by August they had crushed the retreating
Germans

It seemed possible that the war could be over by Christmas 1944

December 1944 → May 1945


The Battle of the Bulge
Hitler gathered what remained of his tank forces and ordered an attack on
the British and Americans who were advancing towards Germany

Germans were halted

Heroic defense in the snow by American parachute troops

German shortage of fuel

Once weather cleared, German tanks were smashed by Allied rocket-firing


aircraft

19,000 US troops died but Germans had not broken through, and lost most
of their remaining tanks and effective troops

The Battle for Berlin


British and Americans agreed to let Soviets attack Berlin

Berlin was already badly damaged by massed Allied air raids, then
reduced to rubble in fighting

Over 90% of the city was destroyed and 100,000 people died

Adolf Hitler had remained in Berlin and after marrying his long-term
mistress, Eva Braun, he committed suicide on 30 April

The Soviet red flag was raised above the German Parliament building, the
Reichstag

Fighting stopped in the city on 2 May

German forces across the whole Europe surrendered unconditionally and all
fighting had stopped by 8 May 1945

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6,9 August 1945 - Hiroshima and Nagasaki
US forces gradually forced the Japanese back across the Pacific

Island after island was recaptured but at enormous cost to the invaders

By August 1945 the US was faced with the daunting prospect of mounting
an invasion of Japan

Japan was completely exhausted from war but did not want to surrender

Some sections of the military still seemed determined to fight to the


death

President Truman decided to drop an atomic bomb on the undamaged


Hiroshima

Despite massive destruction and immediate loss of 70,000 lives, Japan still
did not surrender

3 days later, another atomic bomb was dropped in Nagasaki, with similar
casualties and destruction

Japan finally surrendered on 15 August 1945

Protection in British cities


The government was well aware of the potential of air attack to cause huge
casualties

Airplanes had become far larger than those in WWI and could carry
large bomb loads over very long distances

The government made sure that everybody in Britain had access to some
form of shelter

No shelter could protect against a direct hit but the could give
protection to some degree from blasts and flying metal fragments called
shrapnel

Three types of shelter were available but these were often supplemented
by people sheltering in underground train tunnels

The Anderson Shelter


Highly effective, bolt-together corrugated steel shelter

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When covered in earth it was capable of protecting people from bombs
landing within a few yards of the shelter

Combination of earth cover and corrugated steel → made it very strong

Needs a large space

The Morrison Shelter


Does not need a garden

Indoors

Strong table made of steel

Capable of sheltering whole family

If a house was hit, people could easily become trapped inside

The Brick-Built Street Shelter


1½ thickness of brick + reinforced concrete roof

Typically seated 50 people

World War 2 10
Usually built in areas where people tended to live in large blocks of flats

A near miss could lead to people inside being crushed by the concrete roof

The Tube Station


London’s underground (’tube’) stations were used extensively as shelters

The government tried to prevent this but eventually had to agree to the
public

Londoner’s simply wouldn’t take no for an answer

However not all tube stations were deep underground

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