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The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

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The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4. The Allied Victory. December 22, 1941 Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt meet to develop a war policy. Stalin had asked for help to split Germany into 2 separate fronts. The Tide Turns on Two Fronts. The North African Campaign - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Allied VictoryChapter 16.4

Page 2: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Allied Victory

December 22, 1941

Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt meet to develop a war policy. Stalin had asked for help to split Germany into 2 separate fronts.

Page 3: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Tide Turns on Two Fronts

• The North African Campaign– Rommel takes Tobruk, Libya June 1942;

pushes toward Egypt– British General Montgomery fiercely

attacks at El Alamein, forces Rommel back and retreated west

– American forces land in Morocco, November 1942 – Operation Torch

– General Dwight D. Eisenhower – American commander in Morocco

– In May 1943, Rommel’s forces were defeated by Eisenhower and Montgomery’s forces

Page 4: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Tide Turns on Two Fronts

The Battle for Stalingrad– Summer 1942, German army moves

to capture Soviet oil fields – August 23, 1942, Battle of Stalingrad –

Soviets, Germans battle for control of city

• Luftwaffe – nightly bombing raids on city• By November – Germans controlled 90%

of city – but then were surrounded and trapped

• By February 1943 90,000 frost bitten Germans surrendered

Page 5: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Tide Turns on Two Fronts

• The Invasion of Italy– U.S., British forces land

on, capture Sicily on July 19, 1943

– Mussolini loses power but Germans keep control of northern Italy

• Victor Emanuel III had him arrested

– Allies invade Italy, but Germans keep fighting there until war ends

– Italy surrenders September 3, 1943

Page 6: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

The Allied Home Front

Mobilizing for War in US– Fighting the war requires complete use of all national

resources– 17 to 18 million US workers – many of them women –

make weapons– People at home face shortages of consumer goods – Propaganda aims to inspire civilians to aid war effort

War Limits Civil Rights– Japanese Americans face prejudice, fear– Army puts Japanese Americans in interment camps in

1942

Page 7: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

US Mobilization

Page 8: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

WW2 in The Bay Area

Shipbuilding, liberty ships.Supply the Pacific theater with ammunition, food and other supplies.Headquarters for Army, Navy.Massive increase in population•Opportunities for minorities & women.

Page 9: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Japanese Internment

Page 10: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Japanese Internment

Page 11: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4
Page 12: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

442nd Infantry RegimentJapanese American Regiment

Most decorated regiment in WW2

21 Medals of Honor

Page 13: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Victory in Europe

• The D-Day Invasion– Allies plan invasion of France; use deception

to confuse Germans– D-Day – June 6,1944; day of “Operation

Overlord” invasion of France– Allied forces capture Normandy beaches;

liberate Paris by September

• The Battle of the Bulge– US, British forces advance on Germany from

west, Soviets from east– Battle of the Bulge – German counterattack

in December 1944– Germans gain early success but forced to

retreat

Page 14: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Battle of the Bulge, December 1944

• Last German offensive of the war

• Try to breakthrough Allied lines, cutoff supplies

• Germans are pushed back after initial successes

Page 15: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Victory In Europe

Germany’s Unconditional Surrender

• By 1945, Allied armies approach Germany from two sides

• Soviets surrounded Berlin in April 1945

Hitler commits suicide• On May 9, 1945, Germany

officially surrender.• President Roosevelt dies in

April; Harry Truman becomes President

Page 16: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Soviets Take Berlin, April, 1945

Page 17: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Victory in the PacificThe Japanese in Retreat

– Allies move to retake the Philippines in late 1944

– Battle of Leyte Gulf leaves Japanese navy badly damaged

– Kamikazes – Japanese pilots who fly suicide missions.

– In March 1945, American forces capture Iwo Jima.

– US takes Okinawa in June 1945; Japan suffers huge casualties.

Page 18: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Island Hopping

Page 19: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4
Page 20: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

Victory in the Pacific

The Japanese Surrender• Advisors warn Truman that invasion of Japan

will cost many lives• He has alternative; powerful new weapon

called atomic bomb• Manhattan Project – secret program to

develop the atomic bomb

Page 21: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4

– Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, August 6, 1945; about 75,000 die

– Nagasaki bombed on August 9; 70,000 die immediately

– Japanese surrender on September 2, 1945 on the battleship Missouri

Page 22: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4
Page 23: The Allied Victory Chapter 16.4