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The War in the The War in the Pacific Pacific 1941-1945

The War in the Pacific

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The War in the Pacific. 1941-1945. United States England Australia New Zealand China Philippines. Japan. The Players. Background. Japanese imperial expansion begins in 1931 Need for oil and other natural resources. Japanese War Mentality. Death before surrender - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The War in the Pacific

The War in the PacificThe War in the Pacific

1941-1945

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The Players United States

England

Australia

New Zealand

China

Philippines

Japan

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Background

Japanese imperial expansion begins in 1931

Need for oil and other natural resources

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Japanese War Mentality

Death before surrender Bushido Code meaning “Way of the

Warrior-Knight”, is a Japanese code of conduct and a way of the samurai life

If you surrender you disgrace your family and ancestors

All other Asians are inferior

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Dec 1941

Attack on Pearl Harbor Dec 7th

Dec 8th Japan invades US held territory of the Philippines

The US has only one hope: the aircraft carrier (3 survived Pearl Harbor)

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Early 1942 Japan invades various

other Pacific Islands US garrison in the

Philippines surrenders to Japanese forces in April 1942

Bataan Death March: 60 miles 76,000 POW 12,000 are Americans 5,000 die in a week

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US/Allied Strategy Reclaim the Pacific: Island hopping

Campaign: one island at a time, clear it and use it as a base of operations for the next island.

Must clear the oceans of the Japanese Navy first!

(Large challenge with a crippled Navy and only 3 Aircraft carriers!)

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Japanese Strategy

Make the war so horrible the US will give up

They dug into tropical islands, built underground bunkers and fortresses.

heavy artillery, suicide attacks Bleed the enemy dry, Japanese rarely

surrender but die to the last man!

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Early 1942: The US strikes back

Doolittle raid May 1942: Battle of

Coral Sea, first ever carrier vs. carrier battle- US looses an Aircraft carrier

TURNING POINT:Battle of Midway June

1942

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Midway June 4, 1942

US lost one of two carriers

Japanese lost four irreplaceable aircraft carriers in five minutes!

The Japanese would be on the defensive for the rest of the war.

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South West Pacific‘The Kokoda Track’

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The Kokoda Track

In July 1942 Australia had a small number of Militia in Port Moresby. These were 2nd line soldiers used for home defence: very young (18 & 19), inexperienced, poorly trained and equipped. BUT led by very good officers.

In that month the Japanese landed troops (1500 later growing to 5000) at Buna and Gona on the Papuan north coast and in the following month they landed another force at Milne Bay.

The barrier between the Japanese forces in the north and Port Moresby on the south coast was the Owen Stanley Range - a steep, rugged series of mountains crossed only by a few foot tracks, the most important of which was the Kokoda Track. Initially at the end of June, 600 Militiamen later growing to around 1000, (‘Maroubra’ force) were ordered to hold Kokoda and its airfield against any possible Japanese attack - but this proved an impossible task.

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By the end of July the Militia were carrying out a fighting retreat and it was not until late in August that reinforcements from the 7th Division A.I.F. began to reach them.

‘Ragged Bloody Heroes’ The A.I.F. men, trained for desert warfare, found the

country more frightening than they found the Japanese. Confusion was created by Japanese advances through the trackless jungle on the flanks of positions the Australians were prepared to defend.

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By mid-September the Australians had dug in at Imita Ridge, fifty kilometers from Port Moresby, and were ordered to hold that position. A fight to the death was expected but the Japanese, lacking sufficient supplies and fearing an American attack on their base at Buna, began to withdraw.

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Island Hoping: The first step: Guadalcanal

Invaded by the US Navy and Marines

August 1942Took the Marines 6

months to take the island from Japan

Allies lost 7,100 menJapan lost 31,000 killed

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A list of “D-Days”

Nov 1943 Bouganville Nov 1943 “ Bloody” Tarawa June 1944 Siapan July 1944 Guam and Tinian Oct 1944 Allies invade the Philippines Feb 1945 Iwo Jima April 1945 Okinawa (falls in June)

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Soldier’s Lives

HARSH Subtropical diseases Humid, sticky, and

always hot. Average age was 19 Death was around

every corner.

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Japan’s desperation Oct 1944 U.S. warships in

Leyte Gulf faced their first Kamikaze attacks

2,257 Japanese aircraft were destroyed in these suicide missions during the war.

Kamikaze: Divine Wind Kamikaze

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A most famous Photo Taken on Iwo Jima February 23, 1945 On March 16, when

Iwo Jima was declared secured, 6,821 Americans and 21,000 Japanese (the entire force) had died

Iwo Jima - Flags of our Fathers/Letters from Iwo Jima

Iwo Jima - The Pacific

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Planning for the end

May 1945 Allied forces plan Operation Olympic, the invasion of Japan itself in Nov.

US planners feared casualty estimates of one million!

Japan was desperate but unwilling to surrender!

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“Little Boy” and “Fat Man” are unleashed

August 6, 1945- Hiroshima August 9, 1945 - Nagasaki

killed an estimated 110,000 Japanese

injured another 130,000.

By 1950, another 230,000 Japanese had died from injuries or radiation.

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VJ Day (Victory over Japan day)

August 14, 1945 - Japanese accepts unconditional surrender

Celebration parties erupt throughout every allied country!

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The End

September 2, 1945 - Formal Japanese surrender ceremony on board the MISSOURI in Tokyo Bay as 1,000 carrier-based planes fly overhead.

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The most destructive conflict in human or world history ends.

The world is forever changed.

Millions have died. 100s of cities destroyed Millions are homeless US & USSR are

WORLD powers