ALLIED VICTORY
With the decisive battles of El Alamein,
Midway, and Stalingrad, the initiative in the war had
clearly passed to the Allies by 1943.
Defeat of the Axis powers was not, however, assured. Germany
still controlled all of Western Europe, and Japan
retained most of her conquests of the months following Pearl Harbor. Only in the Soviet Union
were Axis forces in retreat. Having born
the brunt of the German assault in 1941 and 1942, the Soviet Union
demanded that her western allies open a second front against the Nazis as soon
as possible. President Roosevelt was
also anxious to get U.S.
ground troops into battle against the Germans as swiftly as possible, but the
Western Allies were fearful that a direct attack on Nazi-occupied Europe
could produce a disaster similar to the Gallipoli campaign of the First World
War.
Torch
·
Why did the Allies mount an invasion of North Africa?
·
Describe the opposition to the Allied landings.
·
What was the result of the North Africa
campaign?
The practical difficulty of opening a second front in Europe was that it required
the development of an entirely new form of warfare. For Britain
and the United States
to mount an attack on Germany’s
Festung Europa (Fortress
Europe), it would require a series of amphibious landings against heavily
defended shorelines. Despite Soviet
pleas, the British strongly believed that the western allies were far too weak
to attempt an invasion of Western Europe itself in
1943. For a successful cross-channel
landing in France,
they would have to capture a major port in which to resupply their forces. A raid on the French port
of Dieppe, undertaken primarily by
Canadian forces in August 1942, proved to be a disaster. Of the 6,000 forces who took part in the
mission, 3,600 were killed, wounded, or captured. After nine hours of bitter fighting, the remaining
troops were evacuated. The failure of
the Dieppe Raid convinced the
Americans that the British were correct and that an invasion of France
was impossible in the near future.
Originally committed to any early invasion of France,
President Roosevelt finally acquiesced (agreed to) to a British plan to
mount an amphibious invasion in North Africa instead.
Operation Torch
began in November of 1942 with combined British and American landings in Morocco
and Algiers under the command of
American General Dwight D. Eisenhower. These areas were under the Nazi-controlled
French government at Vichy. Marshall Pétain’s government had collaborated
with the Nazis in the hopes that the French would be able to maintain some form
of independence in the southern half of France that was unoccupied by the
Germans. Vichy
officials cooperated with the Germans in rounding up French Jews for
deportation and attacking anti-Nazi resistance fighters. In previous actions in Syria
and on Madagascar,
the Vichy French had put up a spirited defense against the British. With the Americans take the leading role in
the invasion and by not involving Vichy’s
rivals, the Free French under Charles DeGaulle, it was hoped that the French
forces in North Africa would present only token
opposition.
When the landings began on November 8, the French fought
hard to repel them, especially near Casablanca. Two days later the French military commander,
Admiral Darlan, negotiated a deal with the Allies by
which the French ceased their resistance in return for Darlan
being named commander of French North Africa.
This deal with Darlan, one of the leaders of
the Vichy regime, was strongly
criticized by DeGaulle. In response to this deal, the Germans swiftly
occupied the remainder of France.
The U.S.
invasion forces moved swiftly eastward where they hoped to trap Rommel’s forces
retreating from the British after the Battle of El Alamein. The Germans quickly dispatched additional
troops to Tunisia
to attempt to halt the pincer (pinching action) movement. Having moved west from Egypt
across Libya,
the Germans, now threw the full weight of their forces in Africa
against the inexperienced Americans and inflicted a serious defeat on them in
the Battle of Kasserine
Pass in Tunisia
where the U.S.
suffered 6,000 casualties in February 1943:
Thirty German tanks poured out of Faid Pass. Artillery, infantry and 50 German tanks moved
out of a point north of the pass [and] overran the positions of green U.S.
artillerymen, who sometimes scarcely had time to fire one round.
U.S.
armor courageously tried to stop the German onrush along the road to Sbeitla. But the
weight of Rommel’s suddenly concentrated assault was too heavy. The old hands of Rommel’s desert army were
too smart for freshmen U.S.
troops. U.S.
tanks charged blindly into German ambushers.
German 88-mm cannon blasted them to bits. Swift-moving German columns surrounded and
cut them off.
Great columns of smoke rose over abandoned and
burning munition dumps. From Thelepte
airport near Feriana, flames licked into the air as
retreating troops fired 60,000 gallons of aviation gasoline. Three airports were abandoned. In the valleys of olive groves around Sbeitla lay more than 100 wrecked U.S.
tanks, numbers of jeeps, motor transports, huge quantities of ammunition. Toward the German rear lines field long lines
of weary Allied prisoners. Valiant
Allied air support kept the retreat from turning into a rout.
In their first major encounter with the Germans, U.S.
troops had taken a thorough shellacking.
Following the
defeat at Kasserine Pass,
General George S. Patton soon regrouped the American troops and began an effective
counteroffensive. With the help of
British forces attacking from the east under General Montgomery, the American offensive finally drove the last
Germans from Africa in May 1943, capturing 275,000
prisoners.
The Invasions of Sicily and Italy
·
What factors led the Allies to invade Sicily and Italy?
·
What was the major effect of the invasion of Sicily?
·
Describe the fighting in Italy.
In January 1943, Roosevelt and Churchill met at Casablanca
to discuss the next step in the joint Anglo-American war effort. Two important decisions were made at the Casablanca Conference. The first was FDR’s surprise announcement
that the Allies would accept only unconditional surrender from the Axis. Roosevelt used these
terms primarily to assure the Soviets that the western allies would not make a
separate peace with Germany
and Italy. The second decision was to launch an invasion
of Sicily in order to gain
complete control of the Mediterranean. Churchill believed the Italians to be the
weak link in the Axis and advocated further postponement of a cross-channel
invasion of France
in favor of what he believed was the “soft
underbelly of Europe.”
On July 10, 1943, American and British armies landed in the
extreme southeast of Sicily. Prior to the invasion the Allies had engaged
in a skillful deception. Planting false
invasion plans for Greece
on the body of a fictitious British officer, the body was allowed to wash
ashore in Spain. When the “lost” orders reached the Germans
they transferred a tank division and several warships east to Greece
from Italy.
While the German forces on Sicily
fought hard, most of the island’s defenders were ill-trained Italian coastal
reserve forces that quickly surrendered:
Two thousand warships, transports, and landing boats
churned the dark waters of the ancient sea.
Planes roared off to the north, loaded with paratroops or towing gliders
packed with infantrymen.
The assault on Sicily
had begun. General Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Allied commander in North Africa, had set in motion the
largest amphibious military operation ever attempted—not excepting Xerxes’
expedition against Greece
(1,000 boats, 200,000 men).
War broke loose on the southeastern shores of Sicily. First a blistering wave of air power flicked
over the elected zones. Then the
destroyers stood in from the sea and began a graceful, weaving parade offshore,
their guns shooting tongues of flame at enemy pillboxes and strong points on
land. Farther out battleships lobbed
their heavy shells in high-arc interdictory fire to smash highways and
crossroads deeper in the invasion area.
From transports standing between the destroyers and
the battleships came swarms of landing boats, dashing through the hot red
tracer fire from enemy shore batteries and machine guns, grinding to a halt on
the steep shores, discharging their men, then hastening back to the transports
for another load. Commanding the Allied
invasion forces were two hard-driving veterans of the African campaign: General
Sir Bernard Law Montgomery and Lieut. General George Smith Patton.
The island was captured in thirty-eight days at the cost
of 16,500 Allied casualties. Axis losses
exceeded 120,000 men, including 100,000 prisoners. The most important result of the attack on Sicily
was the fall from power of Benito Mussolini.
The Italian people had become increasingly weary of the war and their
German allies. In the hope of avoiding
an Allied attack on the Italian mainland, the Fascist Grand Council voted on
July 25 to remove Mussolini from power and place him under arrest. His successor was Marshal Badoglio who had
earlier led the Italian conquest of Ethiopia. Badoglio hoped to negotiate terms with the
Allies that would allow Italy
to end its participation in the war. In
the meantime, Hitler began moving troops south into Italy
to defend against an Italian collapse.
On September 3, British and
Canadian troops landed at Calabria
on the toe of the Italian peninsula.
That same day, Badoglio signed an armistice with the Allies. The Italian surrender was kept secret in
hopes that it would forestall a German invasion of Italy. When the terms of the armistice were
announced on September 8, American troops preparing to land further up the
peninsula at Salerno expected
little opposition. They were badly
mistaken as they were almost driven into the sea by the German defenders that
had quickly moved into position to replace the Italians:
At Salerno,
below Naples, from positions behind
one of the loveliest of coasts, guns spoke in the early morning.
The guns were Italian.
The gunners were German.
The bodies on the beach were American.
By the highest estimates, the Germans had consigned
some 200,000 men in 18 divisions to Italy. The bulk of these were probably in the north,
under the command of that master of delay, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. Commanding in central and southern Italy
was Air Marshal and General Albert Kesselring.
So the fight was at Salerno
and its approaches to Naples. That
fight was fierce and slow. There, for the first time since the Allies moved
across the Strait of Messina,
German planes attacked in force.
Soldiers pouring on to the beaches from great
convoys had to endure bombs, gunfire and many tank attacks.
After clinging to the beaches for three days, the invaders
received massive air support and finally gained a secure foothold. The relative success of the hastily organized
defense of Salerno, however,
convinced Hitler to change his Italian strategy. After the Italian collapse, the Germans had
planned to withdraw to Northern Italy and await the
Allied forces there. Hitler now decided
that his troops would contest every inch of Italian soil. Churchill’s assumptions of an easy victory in
Italy proved to
be a tragic error. The mountainous
landscape provided the Germans with many natural defense lines. The Italian campaign often resembled the
western front of the First World War as wave after wave of Allied troops bashed
their way into the German defenses. Each
time the Germans inflicted heavy casualties before eventually withdrawing to
another defense line. On September 9,
Hitler dispatched commandos to rescue his old ally Mussolini. The imprisoned Duce was flown to the north of
Italy where
Hitler installed him as the leader of a German puppet regime.
By January, Germany
had moved eight divisions into Italy
and established a powerful defensive line sixty miles south of Rome
called the Gustav Line. There the Allied
offensive soon bogged down against the powerful, entrenched Nazi forces at Monte Cassino early in 1944:
The Allied trudge up the Italian boot had fallen
behind schedule. Skillful, vicious
delaying tactics had won time enough for the Germans to build a strong defense
line across the peninsula at its narrowest (80 miles) point between Naples
and Rome. Against that formidable barricade the British
and U.S. armies
lunged last week.
It was a bruising fight against terrain as well as
pillboxes, snipers’ nests, mined roads, concealed mortars and artillery. The Apennine spine of Italy
scatters rough, irregular ribs in all directions. Rain-flooded rivers gouge the land. Perched on heights above the valley-bottom
roads, the Germans could give around slowly and at a stiff price.
The fighting at Cassino
was especially brutal as the Allies attempted four times to break through the
German lines between January and May 1944.
An Allied attempt to outflank the Germans by landing further up the
coast at Anzio
also bogged down, as 70,000 German troops were able to prevent the Allies from
expanding their beachhead. Complicating
the fighting at Monte Cassino was the presence of a huge sixth century
monastery, which had been the founding place of the Benedictine Order. Sitting atop the hill with a view of the
Allied attackers below, the abbey commanded the entire field of fire. Distrustful of German pledges not to use the
abbey, the British ordered its destruction by air:
Thus the great Benedictine abbey built 400 years ago
on ground where Benedictine abbeys had stood for 1,400 years was demolished. Only one wall section remained standing, and
the next day Marauders swooped over to pick these ribs.
The Americans got no forwarder. If there had been no Germans there before,
there were now. The Nazis moved swiftly
into the ruins, to defend them in the best Stalingrad
fashion. Soon out of the rubble pricked
scores of gun barrels.
Down from the abbey trickled pitiful refugees;
Italians caught in no man’s land.
The destruction of the abbey was a tragic mistake. The Allied air attacks did not kill a single
German soldier, but devastated the shrine and killed thousands of civilians who
had sought refuge there. The Germans
moved into the rubble and became even harder to dislodge. In May, the Anglo-Americans massed their
multinational troops for a fourth attempt to dislodge the Germans and finally
broke through the German defenses on May 11.
Less than a month later, Rome
fell to the Allies on June 4, 1944. Two days later, the British and Americans
finally landed in France.
The Italian campaign became less important as both the
Allies and the Germans placed a greater priority for men and supplies on the
fighting in France. Nevertheless, the slow, costly Allied
progression north in Italy
continued, and the entire country had not been liberated when the war ended in
the spring of 1945. The Allies suffered
300,000 casualties (in comparison with German losses exceeding 400,000) during
the Italian campaign. Churchill’s
predictions of an easy victory proved to be a grievous (regrettable)
error. It postponed the invasion of France
by as much as a year. It also deeply
embittered the Soviet Union, which was convinced that America
and Britain
were deliberately delaying an invasion of France
in order to force the Russians to absorb the bulk of the German war
effort. Britain
and the United States
were, however, able to divert some German forces from the fighting in the Soviet
Union. By 1944, German
defeat seemed much closer as the Soviets were advancing steadily toward the
west and the Anglo-Americans were finally planning to land in France
and drive eastward.
Bombing the Reich
·
Describe the strategy employed by the British in bombing Germany.
How did this differ from the American strategy?
·
What new technologies affected the air war?
·
Why was the Allied bombing campaign controversial?
Strategic bombing made its debut in the Second World
War. Prior to the war it was assumed
that no country could stand up to the widespread bombing of its cities. The Germans hoped that their terror bombing
of London in 1940-41 would force
the British to ask for peace terms. The
Blitz, however, had exactly the opposite effect from what Hitler intended. Rather than destroying morale, it stiffened
it. Despite the damage, the Blitz was
never close to altering Britain’s
dedication to carrying out the war against Germany.
The failure of the Blitz did not deter Britain
from carrying forth its own plans to bomb Germany. With her armies only able to engage the
Germans in North Africa in 1940-42, the British saw
bombing as one way that they could carry the war directly to Germany. Early in the war the British experimented
with daytime attempts to conduct pinpoint raids on industrial and military
targets. German defenses proved to be
too strong, and the enormous losses of planes and aircrews forced the British
to abandon this strategy by 1941. With
daylight precision bombing impossible, the British turned to night raids. Although casualties were reduced, there was a
major loss in accuracy. Estimates held
that only one bomb in ten fell within five miles of its target. Britain
therefore had to depend on “area bombing” by which large numbers of bombs were
dropped in the hope that some would hit strategic targets. Just as with the Luftwaffe’s attacks on Britain,
a large number of civilian casualties resulted.
Many members of the British Chiefs of Staff questioned whether the
limited strategic value of bombing Germany
justified the enormous cost in men and material.
In early 1942, Air Marshal Arthur Harris assumed command
of the British Bomber Command. Nicknamed
“Bomber Harris,” he was determined
to convince British military leaders of the value of the bombing campaign. Having witnessed the Blitz, Harris believed
that incendiary (fire) bombs were more effective in destroying cities
than the high explosive bombs that the Germans had relied upon. Harris began to plan a demonstration raid
that would convince his military superiors to strengthen Bomber Command. On May
30, 1942, Harris sent 1,050 bombers to attack the city of Cologne. High explosive bombs were used to blow apart
buildings, followed by incendiaries to start fires. The fires set by the raid on Cologne
burned for two days, and about 20,000 homes, 1,500 businesses, and 60 factories
were severely damaged. The British lost
only 44 of their planes. More damage was
done to Cologne in one night than
had been done to all of Germany
previously in the war. Still, the
1,000-plane raid did not “wipe Cologne
off the map” as Harris had hoped. The
two other massive raids (on Essen
and Bremen) that followed Cologne
had similar results, although German industrial production was hardly affected. Throughout 1942, the British continued to
refine their tactics. Strips of tin foil
were dropped from planes to confuse German radar, and constant experimentation
was conducted on the best ways to group planes and approach targets.
By 1943 the U.S.
had joined the bombing campaign. With
the assistance of the Norden Bombsight, the Americans ignored Britain’s
previous experience and maintained that precision strategic bombing was
possible. With the Norden, Americans
believed that they could “put a bomb in a pickle barrel” from 30,000 feet. The Americans built far larger bombers than
the British and believed that they could better defend themselves against
German fighter attacks, although their planes were heavier, required more
crewmembers, and could deliver fewer bombs.
What evolved in 1943-1944 was a day-night Allied bombing strategy. The British continued their massive area
bombing by night, while the Americans conducted precision bombing by day.
Few areas of the war saw more
technological advancement than did the air war.
Radar was a decisive element of Britain’s
victory in the Battle of Britain and was soon copied by the Nazis. Continued improvements allowed planes to be
directed toward their targets with greater accuracy and to bomb in bad
weather. Planes became larger as well as
faster. Bombers increased in size to
carry additional armaments and bomb payloads.
Fighters became faster and capable of flying at higher altitudes. The Germans made two key improvements in air
warfare late in the war, the jet airplane and the radio controlled rocket or
“flying bomb.” A German jet fighter
debuted late in 1944, having been delayed by Hitler’s hopes to develop an
ultra-fast jet bomber with which to attack England. The Messerschmitt 262 was capable of flying
over a hundred miles per hour faster than any Allied plane. The V-1
rocket made its debut in the summer of 1944. Shaped like a pilot-less plane, the V-1 was
used mainly against London. During the last year of the war, 10,000 were
launched against London with only a
third successfully reaching their targets.
The bombs caused over 6,000 deaths, mostly civilian. In the fall of 1944 the V-2 rocket made its debut.
More advanced than the V-1, it resembled a modern rocket rather than an
airplane. With preset guidance, it
utilized a fuel mixture of alcohol and liquid oxygen. An average of five rockets fell on London
per day between September 1944 and March 1945, killing 2,700:
For weeks southern England
had been under a bombardment as lurid (intense) as something out an
early [H.G.] Wells novel. Both London
and Berlin kept the business
under wraps. Then, last week, Berlin
announced that London was under
heavy fire from V-2, the second Vergeltungswaffe or
“vengeance weapon”—the long-range rocket which Berlin
had long threatened and London had
long anticipated.
Best information at hand indicates that V-2 is a
wingless, cylindrical missile, 40 ft. long and 5 ft. in diameter, which soars
to the astounding height of 60 to 70 miles.
Witnesses who saw the V-2 falling at night said it
looked like a “falling star” or “the tail of comet.” By day, it looked like “a flying telegraph
pole.”
Despite the German lead in technology, the Luftwaffe
lacked the men and fuel to defend German cities against increased aerial attack
in 1944-1945. Longer-range fighter
escorts, often with detachable reserve fuel tanks, provided greater protection
for Allied bombers. During the entire
war, the Allies dropped 2,700,000 tons of bombs on Germany
with 72% of these falling after June 1944.
In July of 1944, two days and nights of bombing over Hamburg
created a firestorm that set the city ablaze to the point where all of the
oxygen was sucked out of the underground shelters and the occupants either
suffocated or were baked alive from the heat.
In all, the weeklong raids wiped out 6,000 acres of the city, killed an
estimated100, 000, and left another 750,000 people homeless. A February 1945, British and American
night-day raid on the city of Dresden
caused an even more destructive firestorm, killing 60,000. These massive bombing raids, directed mainly
against civilians, were controversial.
Even Churchill, an advocate of the bombing campaign, began to express
doubt over the morality of Harris’ tactics.
Unrepentant (without regret), Harris commented that he did not
regard “the whole of the remaining cities of Germany
as worth the bones of one British Genadier.”
By the end of the war in Europe, German’s cities
were in tatters, but the role of the bombing in winning the war remains in
doubt. Even the massive raids on Hamburg
cut German war production by less than two months, and there was no evidence
that the incessant bombing ever hindered German morale. The severe lack of supplies that Germany
experienced late in the war was due more to a lack of manpower and resources
that the destruction caused by the bombing.
D-Day
·
Why was Normandy selected as the invasion sight?
·
Describe the German strategy to oppose the invasion.
·
Describe the Allied plans for the invasion.
·
What went wrong on D-Day? What
factors caused the invasion to ultimately succeed?
Serious planning for an Allied invasion of France
had begun as early as 1941. After the
Americans had entered the war, the Soviets began to call for a second front in France
to relieve the pressure on the eastern front.
Although the Americans had pressed for an invasion in 1943, Churchill
had urged caution, perhaps remembering the slaughter at Gallipoli that had
nearly ruined his career during the First World War. It was Churchill who had urged the landings
in Italy as an
alternative to a cross-channel invasion, and he even proposed invading the
Balkans rather than France. In late
November 1943 the three leaders of the Allied alliance met for the first time
at the Tehran Conference in Iran. Although Churchill continued to argue that Italy
should be the western allies’ top priority, Stalin continued to press for an
invasion of France
as soon as possible. Roosevelt
agreed and the cross-channel invasion date was set for May of 1944. In return, Stalin agreed to open a massive
attack on the eastern front to coincide with the invasion and to join the war
in the Pacific after Germany’s
defeat.
There were many difficulties with a cross-channel
invasion. The first was to decide where
to land. The closest route was the
passage from Dover to Calais. This route was obvious both to the Allies and
the Germans, and the Germans heavily fortified the French side of the Pas
de Calais. A second option
was to strike farther south in Normandy. Although necessitating a sea journey three
times as far as through the Pas de Calais, the Normandy
option had three strong advantages. It
was less obvious, had level beaches with few cliffs, and was close to the port
of Cherbourg. One of the great difficulties of an
amphibious invasion was being able to move in enough supplies to sustain the
attack after the initial beaches were taken.
The failure of the Dieppe Raid had pointed out the difficulties of
attempting to seize a port directly, but Allied planners believed that an
assault on Normandy could quickly
move south and west, cutting off the Cherbourg
peninsula and thus capturing the port without a direct assault. In a meeting in Quebec
during the summer of 1943, FDR and Churchill had agreed on Normandy
as the eventual invasion site. Plans
progressed under the code-name COSSAC.
One of COSSAC’s largest goals was to convince the Germans that Calais
was their target. A dummy army was built
at Dover, complete with plywood and
inflatable tanks. The American officer
the Germans feared most, General George Patton, was placed in charge of this
fake invasion force. Meanwhile, in the
south of England,
men and material began to assemble under the leadership of General Eisenhower
who was to command the invasion.
No one could underestimate the
importance of the impending attack:
As everyone
knew, if the invasion failed, all else would fail. Britain would have to seek terms, for she would
commit everything in her armory to this attack.
The Americans, appalled by the bloodshed and the magnitude of the
disaster would certainly reject President Franklin D. Roosevelt when he came up
for reelection late in 1944 and seek a victory against Japan before deciding whether to attempt a second
invasion. Then Hitler would be able to
concentrate his entire might against Russia, with every prospect of defeating the Red
Army and emerging as the master of Europe.
Hitler too knew the stakes: “It is the sole decisive
factor in the whole conduct of the war, and hence its final result.” A major Allied advantage was the vast
pressure that they had placed upon the Nazi forces throughout Europe. Of the estimated 302 German divisions in the
field in January 1944, 179 were in Russia,
59 in France,
26 in the Balkans, 22 in Italy,
and 16 in Norway
and Denmark.
The Germans knew an invasion was coming in the spring of
1944, but they did not know where, and were bitterly divided as to how best to
combat it. The “Desert Fox,” General
Erwin Rommel, had been recalled from Italy
to take over the completion of the Atlantic Wall of defenses. Rommel believed that the best place to defeat
the Allied invasion was on the beaches.
He commented that the first day of the invasion would be “the longest
day” of the war and that if the Germans could not prevail in hurling the
invasion force back into the sea, the war would be lost. The problem with Rommel’s strategy was that
to defeat the invasion on the beaches, troops had to be massed at the invasion
site and the Germans were uncertain where this would be. By 1944, virtually every German spy in England
had either been arrested or was being used to feed the Germans false
information. The alternative to meeting the invasion on
the beaches was to keep the main German forces back from the coast, allowing
them to move swiftly to wherever the Allies landed. The danger of this strategy was that the
growing Allied air superiority would prevent the Germans from being able to
reach the invasion point quickly enough.
In the end, the Germans compromised.
The Allied deception worked wonderfully, as Hitler fully believed that
the invasion would come through the Pas de Calais. Most of their troops were located near Calais,
with a few held in reserve to the south.
Eisenhower’s plans for the invasion, now known as Overlord, called for five land and
three airborne divisions to attack five beach areas. The Americans would land at Utah
and Omaha beaches, the British at
Gold and Sword, with a primarily Canadian division landing between the two
British divisions at Juno Beach. The primary parachute targets would be at
Ste-Mere Eglise behind Utah Beach
and at the Pegasus Bridge
behind Sword Beach.
The original target date for the invasion was May 1, but
Eisenhower’s insistence on additional troops pushed it back to June 5. Horrible weather on June 4 convinced
Eisenhower to postpone another day, but Allied meteorologists assured him that
the weather would clear for a brief time on the 6th. The poor weather convinced Rommel that the
invasion was not imminent, and he briefly returned to Germany
to celebrate his wife’s fiftieth birthday.
Overlord finally began on the night of June 5 when
paratroopers were dropped behind German coastal defenses to sever
communications and seize key defense posts.
The next morning 5,000 ships approached the French coast, and 11,000 aircraft
were in action over western France. Almost three million soldiers, sailors and
airmen were involved in the invasion. June 6, 1944 would forever be known as D-Day.
The troops began to land at 6:30
a.m. Days of bombing and an
hour-long naval bombardment had preceded the invasion. In the first day, 156,000 men landed along
the fifty-mile front:
As the ramps went down and khaki-clad men plunged shorewards, German fire mowed them down. Others ran over them. The living lay beside the dead and fought
with flame-throwers, grenades, bazookas and bangalore
torpedoes, which blasted holes in barbed-wire entanglements.
Motor fire from the cliffs fell like rain on one
beach. Over the radio came a pleading
voice to R.A.F. Spitfire pilots wheeling overhead: “For God’s sake get those
mortars quick. Dig them out, boys, they
are right down our necks.” The Spitfires
dipped down and dug the Nazis out.
Not until late afternoon of D-day were some of the
beaches secured. All night, while the
naval guns boomed in the roadstead and explosions flashed along the embattled
coast, the drenched wounded lay in the sand, some whimpering in delirium. Then the invasion rolled on—beyond the
dreadful jetsam on the beaches.
As with any operation of this magnitude, everything did
not go as planned. The paratroopers
assigned to land behind Utah Beach
landed in the marshes near the Douve
River. Many were unable to disengage their
parachutes and heavy equipment in time to avoid drowning in the swamp. The naval bombardment did not knock out the
German artillery positions on the cliffs overlooking the beaches. Landmines and heavy machine gun fire met many
troops as they waded ashore.
At four of the beaches things went pretty much as planned,
but on Omaha Beach
the Americans were in danger of being thrown back into the sea. Unlike the other beaches where the defenders
were either unprepared or engaged in fighting the paratroopers who had landed
the previous night, at Omaha the
invaders were met by a well-equipped, veteran German division. In addition, a high cliff, Ponte du Hoc, was fitted with heavy guns that commanded the
beaches. Attempts to bomb these bunkers
failed as the aircraft overshot their targets, and the bombs landed harmlessly
on French cows. The first American wave
directed against Omaha was blasted
before the troops even reached the shore.
Tanks had been equipped with inflation collars to allow them to drift
ashore, but 27 of the 32 tanks capsized and sank in the choppy waters. The ships off shore continued to pound Point du Hoc, and a battalion of U.S. Rangers slowly made their
way up the vertical cliffs to destroy the guns.
Although the Americans suffered 2,000 casualties on Omaha
Beach, they held. The decisive factor was probably the huge
numbers of men and the supplies that the Allies were able to put ashore. Another factor was that the Germans did not
move swiftly to bring their reserves up to reinforce the beaches. Hitler still believed that the real invasion
would come at Calais and resisted Rommel’s appeals to dispatch reserve tank units to Normandy. Poor communications and the sabotage efforts
of the French resistance also delayed the German response. There were over 9,000 Allied casualties the
first day, but they held the beaches. Festung Europa had
been breached.
Within the first six days, despite the fierce fighting,
the Allies were able to land 360,000 men in France. Every bit as important as the men were the
supplies needed to support them. After Dieppe,
the Allies had abandoned their efforts to immediately seize an existing
harbor. Instead they brought their own
harbors with them. To accomplish the
awesome task of resupplying such a huge force, the Allies had constructed two
huge artificial harbors, known as Mulberries. It took 132 tugboats to haul these concrete
piers across the channel. Along with
smaller artificial harbors, the Mulberries provided vital shelter from the
harsh waters of the English Channel. Even when bad weather destroyed one of the
Mulberries, the other was sufficient for supporting the invasion until the port
of Cherbourg was secured on June
27. In addition, twenty pipelines below
the Channel were used to bring in critical supplies of gasoline for the tanks.
Summer and Fall 1944
·
What was the importance of the fighting at Falaise?
·
Describe the capture of Paris.
·
Describe the attempt to assassinate Hitler in July 1944.
·
Why was the Warsaw
Rising one of the most controversial events in the war?
It took almost two months for the Allies to secure their
position in Normandy. In terms of territory seized, the invasion
was a month and a half behind schedule, but in terms of men and material
landed, it was right on schedule. On
July 25, Allied troops finally broke through the German lines between Caen and Saint-Lo
and then fanned out into open country. General Omar Bradley’s First Army
smashed the German lines after a heavy bombardment. Patton’s Third Army, spearheaded by heavy
tank attacks, then broke through the hole Bradley had created and began a
steady drive into the heart of France. British forces under Montgomery,
with heavy air support, moved east toward Falaise. After three days of harsh fighting near
Falaise, American, British and Canadian forces entrapped the retreating German
armies. When the fighting near Falaise
finally ended on August 20, 10,000 Germans had been killed and another 50,000
taken prisoner. Meanwhile the Germans
were handicapped by the huge Soviet offensive in the east and a second Allied
landing on the southern French coast on August 15. The southern invasion forces quickly seized Marseilles
and Nice and threatened to cut German forces in France
in two.
After Falaise, Allied armies streaked rapidly eastward. Forces commanded by Patton reached the Seine
River thirty miles south of Paris
on August 19:
Lieut. General George S. Patton Jr. rapped the map
with his leather riding crop, which sheathes a glistening poniard
(dagger). He pointed with it to the next
objective, a town 50 miles away. Said he
to a Third Army corps commander: “Get there—any way you want to.” As he had before, he was demanding the
impossible of his supply officers. As
before, in this miraculous month, they would get the impossible done. By last week “Georgie”
Patton’s supply lines reached more than halfway across France. He was getting gasoline by parachute for his
forward tanks. Exactly how far along
toward Germany’s
borders his 35-ton daggers were by this week was something for the enemy to
worry about. As a rule, they did not
find out until the tanks were upon them, blazing away at their rear.
Eisenhower had originally intended to bypass Paris
to avoid fighting in the city but on August 19, both the communist and Gaullist
(supporters of DeGaulle) resistance forces staged a rebellion in Paris. The German commander, Gen. Dietrich von Choltitz, had been ordered by Hitler to “fight to the last
man” and then burn the city.
Fortunately, Von Choltitz refused. De Gaulle then totally bypassed the Allied
chain of command and ordered the Free French Second Armored Division to move
into the capital. On August 24, French
forces re-entered their capital, and the next day the Germans surrendered. The French humiliation of 1940 had been
avenged as De Gaulle marched triumphantly down the Champs Élyseés, and Paris
exploded in celebration. Time’s Chief War Correspondent, Charles
Christian Wertenbaker, described the joyous scene:
I have seen the faces of young people in love and
the faces of old people at peace with their God. I have never seen in any face such as joy as
radiated from the faces of the people of Paris
this morning. This is no day for
restraint, and I could not write with restraint if I wanted to….
No longer did they simply throw flowers and
kisses. They waved arms and flags and
flowers; they climbed aboard the cars and jeeps embracing the French and us
alike; they uttered a great mass cry of delight that swelled and died down and
swelled to a greater height. They cried:
“Vive De Gaulle!” and “Vive Leclerc (a French
General)!” But one word repeated over
and over rose above all the other words.
It was: “Merci! Merci! Merci!”
A little girl had given us a Tricolor, which we put
on the windshield of the jeep, but, seeing our uniforms and hearing our accents,
the people said: “You are the
Americans?” “You have come at
last!” “For four years we have waited.”
For a time it appeared that the war in Europe
was close to an end in the late summer of 1944.
In July, a group of German officers and civilians, naively hoping to
convince the Western Allies to make peace, had tried to kill Hitler by placing
a bomb in his headquarters in East Prussia. The bomb, planted by Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg, a wounded war hero, exploded,
killing three officers but inflicted only minor injuries on Hitler. Afterward, the Gestapo hunted down everyone
suspected of any involvement in the plot.
Von Stauffenberg was promptly arrested and shot. One of the other suspects was Gen. Rommel,
who was allowed to commit suicide. Many
of the other conspirators were not so fortunate. They were tried in a public court in Berlin
and then executed by hanging with piano wire.
Hitler ordered their excruciatingly slow deaths filmed for his viewing.
By mid-September, the Allies had reached the border of Belgium
in the north and Germany
itself in the south. At the same time,
on the eastern front, the Russian advance was pouring westward. By mid-July 1944, the Soviets were deep into Poland
and by the end of August had crossed into the Balkans. The Soviets had reached the Vistula River
upstream from Warsaw by the end of
the July. With liberation near, the
Polish underground Home Army commanded by General Tadeusz
Bor-Komorowski staged an uprising on August 1. Like the French, the Polish hoped to play a
major role in liberating their capital.
The Home Army, who were loyal to the anti-Communist Polish exile
government in London, disrupted the
Germans for several days and awaited the arrival of the Soviet forces. They never came. Stalin halted his armies at the Vistula, leaving the undermanned and poorly
armed Poles to fight the Germans alone.
For over two weeks, Stalin refused to allow U.S.
planes to use Soviet airfields for making supply flights to the Home Army. The Warsaw
Rising thus became one of the most controversial events of the war. The Soviets insisted that their armies had to
be resupplied after their rapid advances of the early summer and could advance
no further. Others contended that Stalin
deliberately paused to allow the Germans to destroy the anti-communist Poles. Relations between the Soviets and the
London-based Polish exile government had already been strained for over a
year. In May 1943, the Germans had
produced evidence linking the USSR
to the deaths of some 25,000 Polish officers and civilians found buried in mass
graves in the Katyn
Forest
near Smolensk. The Soviets vigorously denied that they were
responsible for the massacre that took place in 1940 and blamed the Nazis. As a result of this controversy, Stalin had
severed relations with the Polish exile government in London. Stalin also insisted that the postwar
Soviet-Polish boundary would have to be the one established after the
Polish defeat in 1939 and not the much more eastern Soviet-Polish border that
had existed prior to the war. Without
outside assistance, the Home Army was crushed, and by October, the Germans were
once again in control of the city.
15,000 members of the Home Army were killed as were as many as 250,000
civilians. The Nazis destroyed most of
the city before it was finally occupied by the Soviets in January 1945.
Although halted outside of Warsaw,
the Soviets continued to advance elsewhere in the fall of 1944. Romania
surrendered on August 23, and in early September the Red Army entered Bulgaria,
knocking the Bulgarians out of the war.
In October, the Soviets entered Yugoslavia,
although Tito’s partisans had already liberated most of the country. By January 1945, the Soviet forces were
fighting for Budapest and moving
through East Prussia. Caught between the Western Allies moving on
its western border and the Russians pouring in from the east, the defeat of
Nazi Germany appeared imminent.
The Last German Counterattack
·
What was the goal of Operation Market-Garden? Why did fail?
·
Describe the Battle
of the Bulge.
Throughout 1944, many German leaders hoped that the Allied
offense in the west could be halted and the western allies persuaded to make a
peace that would allow them to continue to defend against the Soviet advance
from the east. Knowing full well of the atrocities
committed by the Germans in the invasion of the Soviet Union,
the Germans were terrified by the prospect of a Soviet invasion. The July plot to kill Hitler was motivated by
the mistaken belief that, with Hitler out of the way, Britain
and the U.S.
would come to terms with Germany
rather than allow the Soviet armies to drive into the heart of Europe. Despite growing mistrust, the Britain,
the United States,
and the Soviet Union maintained their policy of unconditional
surrender and prepared for the invasion of Germany.
Eager to enter Germany
as early as possible, British General Montgomery
argued for a bold airborne operation to leap across the Rhine
River in Holland. Three airborne divisions would be landed
sixty miles behind the German lines where they would secure several key Rhine
bridgeheads in Holland until the
Allied armies could reach them.
Eisenhower opposed Operation
Market-Garden, preferring to advance more slowly across a broader front,
but finally gave in to the British.
Market-Garden began on September 17 with the landing of 16,500
paratroopers and an additional 3,500 troops in gliders. It soon became a disaster. The Allies were unaware that there were two
SS tank divisions in the area. The
lightly armed Allied troops were unable to secure the bridges against fierce
German opposition. Bad weather made
airborne relief impossible, and the main Allied force could not reach the
forward positions around Arnhem. The Allies suffered almost 10,000 casualties
(most as captives) in the failed mission.
The failure of Market-Garden pointed out several weaknesses of the
Allied position in the west. In their
rapid dash across France,
supply lines had been stretched to the breaking point. Antwerp,
in Allied occupied Belgium,
was the only major port supplying the Allied armies facing the Germans in the
north. Patton’s forces, further south
near Luxembourg,
were also low on supplies.
On Dec. 16, 1944, the Germans launched an all-out
attack against the Allied lines, known as the Battle of the Bulge. The
attack took the Allies totally by surprise.
With a quarter of a million men and a massive tank force, the Germans
hit the center of the Allied lines at the thinly held Ardennes
area that had been the sight of the Nazi breakthrough in 1940. The German goal was to drive a wedge between
the Allied forces and capture Antwerp,
depriving the Allies of their only port and either stalling the Allied
offensive or forcing a Dunkirk-style evacuation:
At first everything was wild confusion. Germans suddenly appeared over the crest of
hills and shot up towns. They overran
rear-area supply points, pounded upon U.S.
artillerymen before they could get to their guns.
Field Marshal von Rundstedt’s
skillful breakthrough had had the first great element of success:
surprise. He had struck the thinnest
sector of the American line. He had
cleverly begun with light attacks, concealing his intentions, playing upon the
Americans’ underestimation of his strength.
Then savagely, the full force of the German blow was
unleashed. Its suddenness, its
underrated force, sent the Americans reeling like a boxer who has taken a
terrific punch to the solar plexus. The
Germans followed through, hoping to corner the Americans, to knock out the U.S.
first Army.
For a week the Germans drove
deeply into Allied-held territory, penetrating over fifty miles. They surrounded the city of Bastogne and
demanded the surrender of the American forces under the command of Gen. Anthony
McAuliffe:
The U.S.
command had given one order: hold Bastogne
at all costs. The Americans (some
10,000) worked like devils to make some sort of defense. On a perimeter about two miles out of the
town they set up a line of foxholes, manned by the 101st’s paratroopers. Stationed nearby were groups of tanks and
tank destroyers. Slight (5 ft. 8 in.,
135 lb.), salty Brigadier General Anthony Clement McAuliffe, the 101st’s acting
commander charged with holding Bastogne, called them his “Team Snafu.”
On the first night one of the worst things that
could befall an island of besieged happened to Bastogne:
the Germans captured its complete surgical unit. Bastogne’s wounded would have to get along without amputations,
without fracture splints, without skilled care at all.
By Friday Bastogne
was a wrecked town, its outskirts littered with dead. There had been at least four fighting Germans
to every American—the elements of eight enemy divisions. The dead were probably in the same ratio.
Through the lines on Friday came in enemy envoy
carrying a white sheet. He delivered an ultimatum: two hours to decide upon
surrender. The alternative: “annihilation by artillery.”
General McAuliffe did not hesitate. He had been
touring the aid stations, had heard the wounded beg him, “Don’t give up on
account of us, General Mac.” He sat at a debris-littered desk, printed his
reply with formal military courtesy: “To the German Commander—NUTS!—the
American Commander.” So there would be no misinterpretation, an officer
translated for the blindfolded German envoy: “It means the same as ‘Go to
Hell.’”
Eisenhower then ordered Patton and his Third Army to turn
north toward the fighting. As the German
offensive slowed due to a lack of fuel for its tanks, Patton rolled up against
its exposed southern flanks. By December
26, Bastogne was relieved, and the
bulge that the Germans had forced in the Allied lines was now being pinched
off. With the offensive losing its
steam, Hitler once again refused to allow his generals to retreat. The initial Nazi success became a crushing
defeat as their advancing armies were encircled and destroyed. Three weeks after the attack, the Allies had
reoccupied the entire bulge. In the
fighting, both sides lost approximately 100,000 men (the greatest American
losses of the war), and the Germans lost the bulk of their tanks in the
west. Little was left to oppose the
invasion of Germany
in the spring.
The End of Nazi Germany
·
What decisions were made at the Yalta Conference?
·
What was the significance of the meeting at the Elbe River?
·
How did Hitler die?
·
What were the Nuremberg Trials?
The Soviets launched their offensive on the eastern part
of Germany on January 12, 1945. They stormed across the Vistula,
finally captured Warsaw, and drove
into Germany
itself. Eleven Soviet armies, composed of 2.5 million
men and 6,500 tanks smashed into Germany. By the end of January, a Soviet Army under
the command of General Zhukov was only 40 miles away from Berlin. February and March were spent consolidating
their flanks, but in April they began their drive on Berlin.
The three Allied leaders met for the final time in
February 1945 in the Soviet Crimea resort town of Yalta. At the Yalta Conference, the structure
of postwar Europe was determined. Germany
was to be divided into four zones of occupation to be administered by the U.S.,
Britain, France,
and the Soviet Union.
Berlin, which fell into
the Soviet zone, was to be similarly divided into four sections. The most contentious discussions centered
upon the future of Poland
and the rest of Eastern Europe. Already, the Soviets had organized a
pro-communist Polish government in Lublin
while the western allies continued to support the London-based Polish
government in exile. It was decided at Yalta
that the governments of Eastern Europe would be
temporarily composed of all anti-fascist elements, implying a coalition of
communist and non-communist parties, until democratic elections could be
held. Stalin’s demands that the USSR
retain the territory it had obtained in the 1939 Nazi-Soviet Pact and that Poland
be compensated with territory from Germany’s
eastern provinces were granted. In
return, the Soviets repeated their pledge to enter the war against Japan,
promising to declare war on Japan
three months after Germany’s
surrender. Tired by his long journey to Yalta,
an ill Roosevelt returned to the United
States and addressed Congress while sitting
in a chair, publicly acknowledging his paralysis for the first time. Less than two months later, he died of a cerebral hemorrhage on April 12,
1945 while visiting his
vacation home in Warm
Springs, Georgia.
American troops under Gen. Bradley pushed on in the
meantime toward the Rhine and early in March captured
the city of Cologne on the river’s
west bank. The next day, through a
remarkable stroke of luck, he discovered and seized an undamaged bridge over
the river at Remagen,
and Allied troops were soon pouring across the Rhine. In the following weeks the British commander,
Montgomery, with a million troops, pushed into Germany
in the north while Bradley’s army, sweeping through central Germany,
completed the encirclement of 300,000 German soldiers in the Ruhr.
The German resistance was finally broken on both fronts,
and the only real question remaining involved how the Allies would divide the
final tasks of conquest. American forces
under General Eisenhower were moving eastward much faster than they had
anticipated and possibly could have beaten the Russians to Berlin
and Prague. The American and British high commands
decided, instead, to halt the advance along the Elbe River in central Germany
to await the Russians. General Bradley’s
First Army met the westward advancing Soviet Army on April 25. The meeting of the Americans and the Russians
at the Elbe symbolized the total destruction of Hitler’s
Germany. Five days later, as the Russians stormed Berlin,
Hitler committed suicide in his command bunker beneath the Reich
Chancellery. On May 4, German forces in
the Netherlands,
Denmark, and Northwest
Germany surrendered to the British. On May
7, 1945, the Germans formally surrendered to General Eisenhower,
and the next day German officials in Berlin
surrendered to the Soviets. May 8 was
officially declared V-E Day for victory in Europe.
As the Allied armies advanced
through German territory, the full extent of the Nazi horror became
apparent. The eastern death camps in
Poland had all been liberated by the Russians, but when the Americans and
British entered western Germany, they encountered concentration camps such as
Dachau, Bergen-Belsen (where Anne Frank died), and Buchenwald where the last
survivors of the death camps had been marched in advance of the Russian
invasion. The sight of the emaciated
survivors and thousands of dead bodies made a lasting impression on the Allied
forces. Life Correspondent George Rodger reported from the Belsen
camp:
During the month of March, 17,000 people died of
starvation, and they still die at the rate of 300 to 350 every 24 hours, far
beyond the help of the British authorities, who are doing all possible to save
as many as still have strength to react to treatment.
Under the pine trees
the scattered dead were lying, not in twos or threes or dozens, but in
thousands. The living tore ragged
clothing from the corpses to build fires over which they boiled pine needles
and roots for soup. Little children
rested their heads against the stinking corpses of their mothers, too nearly
dead themselves to cry. A man hobbled up
to me and spoke to me in German. I
couldn’t understand what he said and I shall never know, for he fell dead at my
feet in the middle of his sentence.
Many units were ordered to tour the liberated camps to
reinforce the true horror of the evil that they had been fighting against. After the war, the Allies held a series of
war crimes trials in Nuremberg,
site of the great Nazi Party rallies of the 1930s, in which twelve top Nazi
leaders were condemned to death. The
most famous of the Nuremberg
defendants was Herman Göring, one of Hitler’s earliest supporters. Several top Nazi leaders (Hitler, Goebbels, and Himmler) had already
committed suicide, and Göring too cheated the hangman by taking poison that had
been smuggled to him in his cell. Many
other perpetrators of Nazi atrocities were condemned to death in separate
trials.
Island Hopping
·
Describe the American strategy in the Pacific. What difficulties existed in pursuing this
strategy?
·
Describe the invasion of Tarawa. How did this affect American strategy?
·
Explain the significance of the Battle of the Philippine Sea
and the conquest of the Marianas.
·
Describe the invasions of Peleliu and the Philippines.
With the defeat of Hitler’s Germany,
the conquest of Japan
still remained. The American strategy
was to hop from island to island until they were close enough to unleash the
might of their airforce on Japan
and then ultimately invade Japan
itself. As the American forces advanced
toward Japan
they were forced to attack island after island, defended by fanatical soldiers
willing to fight to the death for their emperor. The stubborn Japanese code of Bushido
(the traditional code of the Japanese samurai, stressing honor,
self-discipline, bravery, and simple living) maintained that surrender was the
ultimate dishonor. Island by island, the
Japanese were determined to make the Americans pay dearly for every mile that
they advanced toward Tokyo. After the Battle of Midway in June 1942, the
initiative had passed to the Americans but Japan
still commanded an impressive empire.
The struggle for Guadalcanal had pointed out the
practical difficulty of the island hopping strategy. Japan
did not plan to defeat the Americans, they simply hoped that the cost of
defeating Japan
would prove to be too great and that a peace settlement could be made that
would enable Japan
to keep most of its conquests of 1941-42.
The first of these island hops
took place in November 1943 at the tiny islands of Tarawa. Located in the Gilbert Islands
halfway between Hawaii and Guadalcanal,
the largest island of Tarawa
was less than three square miles in size.
Its capture was a key prelude to the American attack on the Marshall
Islands.
Defending Tarawa were 4,500 top Japanese troops
concealed in well-hidden defensive bunkers.
The island’s commander bragged that a million men could not take the
island in a hundred years. The ensuing
fighting was brutal:
The boat boss said: “From here on you can walk
in.” The men in the boat, about 15 in
all, slipped into neck-deep water. Five
or six machine guns were concentrating all their fire on the group. Any one of the 15 would have sold his chances
for an additional $25 on his life insurance policy. There were at least 700 yards to walk slowly,
and as the waders rose on to higher ground, they loomed as larger and larger
targets. Those who were not hit would
always remember how the bullets hissed into the water inches to the right,
inches to the left.
After centuries of wading through shallowing water and deepening machinegun fire, the men
split into two groups. One group headed
straight for the beach. The other struck
toward a coconut log pier, then crawled along it past wrecked boats, a stalled
bulldozer, countless fish killed by concussion.
The Marine beachhead at this point comprised only
the 20 feet between the water line and the retaining wall of coconut
logs.... Beyond this strip, Jap snipers
and machine-gunners were firing.
A mortar man 75 yards down the beach rose to a
kneeling position, tumbled with a sniper’s bullet through his back. The wounded man’s companion popped up to
help, [and] got a bullet through the heart.
That was the way it went the first day. The assault battalions had been cut to
ribbons. Anyone who ventured beyond the beachhead and the retaining wall—and by
mid-afternoon several hundred Marines had so ventured—was likely to become a
casualty. From treetop concealment and
from pillbox slits Jap snipers and machine-gunners raked the Americans.
The turning point came about 1 p.m. on the second day.
Millions of bullets, hundreds of tons of explosive poured into the
stubborn Japs.
Strafing planes and dive-bombers raked the island. Light and medium tanks got ashore, rolled up
to fire high explosive charges point-blank into the snipers’ slots of enemy
forts. Artillery got ashore, laid down a
pattern over every yard of the Jap positions.
Ceaseless naval gunfire became more accurate.
But the decisive factor was the fighting spirit of
the U.S. Marines. Not every Corpsman was
a natural hero: some quivered and hugged the beach, but most—those who feared
and those who disdained death—went forward into the Jap fire.
On the first day, of the 5,000 men who came ashore, 1,500
died or were wounded. Three days later
the marines had secured the island. Of
its 4,500 Japanese defenders, only 17 were captured alive. The U.S.
suffered slightly more that 3,000 casualties or ten for every acre of the
island. Within hours after the end of
the fighting, American engineers, called Seabees,
were building an airstrip from which to launch the next conquest.
Tarawa
was just the first in a long series of bloody island conquests that awaited the
Americans in the Pacific. Eventually an
elaborate procedure was developed to minimize casualties:
The formula for Central Pacific warfare was becoming
standardized: 1) Bomb the important installations on an atoll heavily while 2)
neutralizing other Jap bases within 500 miles by knocking out their airfields,
3) bring up the heavy warships and pound the atoll for several days, 4) land
troops, with artillery on smaller islands adjoining the important
installations, 5) throw naval gunfire, bombs, artillery shells on the
installations until they are pulverized, 6) send in the foot soldiers to kill
whatever Japs still wait for death in the ruins.
In January 1944, U.S.
forces landed in the Marshall Islands. Employing the lessons learned at Tarawa,
Allied casualties were much lighter. At Eniwetok the Japanese garrison of 2,200 was
wiped out at the cost of only 400 American casualties. The heavily defended island
of Truk
was not invaded but devastated by air as the U.S.
sank thousands of tons of Japanese shipping and destroyed 275 aircraft. The success of the campaign in the Marshall
Islands paved the way for the invasion of
the Mariana Islands in June. During the invasion of the Marianas,
the two countries engaged in the war’s biggest carrier battle—the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Knowing that the capture of the Marianas would bring the U.S.
forces close enough to directly bomb the Japanese home islands, the Japanese
threw their entire fleet at the Americans near the island
of Guam. Admiral Toyoda, Commander in Chief of the
Japanese fleet, said, “The fate of the empire rests on this one battle.” By this time in the war, however, Japan
was badly undermanned and underequipped.
The U.S.
outnumbered Japan seven to five in both battleships and carriers. More importantly, the Americans had twice the
number of carrier planes. During the
battle, U.S.
submarines sank two Japanese carriers, torpedo aircraft sank another, and U.S.
planes destroyed all but 35 of the 430 Japanese aircraft in what came to be
known as the “Marianas Turkey Shoot.”
Japan
would never recover from the loss of the majority of its trained pilots. At the same time as the Battle
of the Philippine Sea, American marines were landing in
the Marianas at Saipan. Saipan was a vital
Japanese administrative center. 77,000
marines landed on June 15. Casualties
were heavy the first two days as 4,000 marines fell. The invasion, intended to last three days,
took three weeks. The U.S.
suffered almost 50% casualties. Of the
32,000 Japanese defenders, less than 1,000 were captured alive. From Saipan, the huge
U.S. B-29 bombers could reach Japan.
General MacArthur now prepared for his return to the Philippines. Prior to the invasion, the marines attacked
the coral islands of Palau
group in order to protect the eastern flank of the Philippine invasion. On one of these islands, Peleliu,
the Japanese employed a new strategy.
Instead of confronting the invaders on the beaches, they waited, well
hidden, in inland bunkers. It took the
marines over two months to subdue the resistance. Again, the casualties were horrendous. The Americans suffered over 6,000 casualties,
which accounted for over 50% of the invasion force. The battle for the Philippines
began in October 1944. In the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the Japanese
fleet was dealt a fatal blow as the Americans sank three battleships and four
carriers. The battle was the largest
naval engagement in the history of the world as 282 ships took part in the
fighting. With its defeat, the Japanese
navy had failed in its objective to destroy transports landing American
soldiers on the Philippine island of Leyte. For seven months the fighting raged in the
Philippine jungles, but in February MacArthur triumphantly returned to the
capital of Manila. On July 5, MacArthur announced that the
campaign for the liberation of the Philippines
had ended. Not only had the Japanese
Imperial Army lost more than 400,000 of its best troops in the campaign (U.S.
casualties were estimated at 14,000 dead and 48,000 wounded), but also with the
fall of the Philippines Japan’s supply lines were now virtually cut. During the past year, American submarines had
been wreaking havoc on Japanese shipping and crippling the nation’s domestic
economy. By the summer of 1944, the
already skimpy food rations for the Japanese people had been reduced by nearly
a quarter and there was also a critical gasoline shortage.
The Advance on Japan
·
Describe the fighting in China.
Why was this important to the defeat of Japan?
·
Describe the American bombing of Japan.
·
Describe the fighting on Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
By early 1945, the defeat of Japan
seemed inevitable, but the war was not yet over. As American forces advanced steadily closer to
the Japanese mainland, the imperial forces seemed only to increase their
resistance. Fighting still continued in
the Philippines
long after the capture of Manila. During the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the Japanese
had also unveiled kamikaze planes
that deliberately crashed into American ships.
The kamikaze (“divine wind” in Japanese) planes were loaded with
explosives and sank a U.S.
escort carrier at Leyte.
Like the island defenders who fought to the death, the kamikaze pilots
showed Japan’s
willingness to employ almost any method to avoid defeat.
While the fighting raged in the Pacific, Allied forces
also fought against the Japanese in China,
Burma, and India. The war in China
was seen as a vital method of pinning down sizable Japanese forces that otherwise
could have been used against the island hopping strategy. The U.S.
and Britain had
supported Chaing Kai-shek’s forces in China
since early in the war. Most of the aid
was funneled north from India
through Burma
to Chaing’s forces in western China
until this supply line was cut by the Japanese in mid-1942. As the British struggled to regain control of
Burma, U.S. General Joseph H. Stilwell organized a five
hour airlift to China
over the forbidding Himalayan barrier, “the
Hump,” to supply the isolated Chinese
forces and to bring Chinese troops out for Stilwell to train and arm. In 1943, Stilwell led Chinese, Indian, and a
few American troops back through northern Burma, constructing a road and a parallel pipeline
across the rugged mountains into China. The Burma Road finally opened in the fall
of 1944. Efforts to defeat the Japanese
in China were hampered, however, by the feud between
Chiang and the Chinese Communists led by Mao Tse-tung. Rather than using his full resources against
the Japanese, Chaing used many of his troops to
maintain an armed frontier against the communists and stored weapons supplied
from the Allies for later use against Mao.
Chaing’s forces, trained and led by
American advisors, finally mounted an offensive in the spring and summer of
1945. By this time, the Japanese on the
mainland were so weakened that they had begun to relinquish their hold on China. As Japanese power waned, fighting between Chaing’s Chinese Nationalists and the Communists became
more prevalent.
The most important outcome of the successful campaign of
island hopping was that the American airforce was now
in a position to take the war directly to the cities of Japan. In January 1945, General Curtis LeMay was placed in charge of the
bombing of Japan
which was being conducted from the Mariana Islands. LeMay
increased the number of raids over Japan
and also modified their tactics.
Changing from the high-level precision bombing of industrial and
military targets, LeMay
favored nighttime low-level incendiary raids that set Japan’s
cities ablaze. On February 25, over 150 B-29s carried out a
huge incendiary attack on the Japanese capital.
An entire square mile of central Tokyo
was burned. The success of this raid
encouraged others. On the night of March 9, 60% of Tokyo
was destroyed in an incendiary raid. Two
thousand tons of bombs were dropped from 200 planes in a two-hour period. Approximately 100,000 people died, and 16
square miles of the city were destroyed.
In the next month LeMay’s tactics were used on the other major Japanese cities as
well. An additional 100,000 civilians
died in the firestorms, and millions were left homeless. By the end of July, the U.S.
airforce had almost run out of targets. Japanese industry and transportation had been
shattered, and all semblance of normal life for the Japanese civilians had
ended as civilian casualties exceeded 800,000, including 300,000 deaths.
In the meantime, American
marines moved in February to seize the tiny (8 sq. mile) volcanic island
of Iwo Jima,
only 650 miles from Tokyo, a
potentially valuable base for future air strikes against Japan. American bombers could not carry full bomb
loads from their bases in the Marianas, but this would
be possible if the U.S.
could capture Iwo Jima.
In addition, bases on Iwo Jima would allow American fighter escorts to
protect the bombing missions. For 76
days the U.S.
bombarded Iwo Jima from the air. Again, the Japanese based their defenses
inland. 21,000 Japanese troops dug into
fortified caves and tunnels awaiting the invasion force. 60,000 marines landed on February 19. Capturing the island was supposed to take 19
days. It took 26. The volcanic ash made it too hot for the
invaders to dig in. The Japanese
defenses held the high ground atop Mount Suribachi, an
extinct volcano, and trained their fire on the invaders (the eventual capture
of Mt. Suribachi
has been commemorated in the Marine Corps Memorial in Washington,
D.C.):
On Iwo Jima last week at
least 40,000 Marines fought to the death with 20,000 entrenched Japanese in an
area so constricted that the troops engaged averaged twelve men to an
acre. Ashore with the marines, Time Correspondent Robert Sherrod radioed
his account of the battle:
Two hours after the original landings … we had a
toehold and it looked like a good one.
But all hell broke loose before noon. From the north and from the south the hidden
Japs poured artillery and 6-in. mortars into the marines on the beachhead. Nearly all our tanks were clustered near the
black-ash beaches like so many black beetles struggling to move on tarpaper.
The first night on Iwo Jima
can only be described as a nightmare in hell.
It was partly the weather—Iwo
is as cold as Ohio at this
season. The front line now has moved out
of the tropics into a region of high winds and long periods without
sunshine. All through this bitter night
the Japs rained heavy mortars and rockets and artillery on the entire area
between the beach and the airfield.
Twice they hit casualty stations on the beach. Many men who had been only wounded were
killed. One group of medical corpsmen
was reduced from 28 to 11; the corpsmen were taking it, as usual.
Along the beach in the morning lay many dead. About them, whether American or Jap, there
was one thing in common. They died with
the greatest possible violence. Nowhere
in the Pacific war have I seen such badly mangled bodies. Many were cut squarely in half. Legs and arms lay 50 ft. away from
anybody. Only the legs were easy to
identify—Japanese if wrapped in khaki puttees, American if covered by canvas
leggings.
The capture of Iwo Jima was the
costliest battle in the history of the U.S. Marine Corps. Thirty percent of the American forces became
casualties (7,000 killed and over 25,000 wounded). Only 200 of the 21,000 Japanese soldiers were
alive at the battle’s conclusion.
The island
of Okinawa
was the next American target. Considered
part of Japan
itself, Okinawa was a vital base for the U.S.
invasion of the Japanese home islands, only 350 miles to the north. Okinawa was defended
by 77,000 Japanese soldiers as well as a civilian militia of over 20,000. Even small children were armed to resist the
invaders. The American landings began on
April 1 in the largest and costliest Allied action in the Pacific. Week after week the Japanese sent kamikaze
suicide planes against American and British ships, sacrificing 3,500 of them
while sinking 36 ships and damaging over 300 others:
There was no question that the hara-kiri (a form of suicide) tactic of Kamikaze airmen had
been adopted as a chief effort. There
were strong indications that it had become the major hope of a defense of
desperation.
Now nearly all Jap air attacks are suicidal. Last week the Navy confirmed reports that the
Japs were building a special Kamikaze plane, with a cockpit into which the
pilot is locked before the take-off.
A picture of what it was like on the receiving end
of a Kamikaze attack came from Time Correspondent
Robert Sherrod, who cabled:
“The first suicide attack I saw was last winter,
against a ship from which I had recently been detached. I had the excruciating experiencing of
watching a flaming furnace, which contained many of my friends. Seven Jap planes got through the fighter
screen. Six were shot down, but the
seventh crashed my old ship. It poured a
column of smoke 300 feet high. Through
the black an occasional explosion pitched roaring flames.”
Japanese troops on shore launched equally desperate
attacks on the American lines. The United
States and its allies suffered nearly 50,000
casualties on land and sea before finally capturing the islands in late
June. Only 7,400 of the 110,000 Japanese
troops survived. The American commander,
Gen. Simon Buckner, was killed in the fighting, and the Japanese commander,
Gen. Ushijima, committed hara kiri,
disemboweling himself with his own sword.
A decade after the war ended, huge piles of bleached bones could still
be seen at the bottoms of the steep cliffs where much of the fighting took
place.
The huge casualties suffered at Iwo Jima
and Okinawa seemed just small precursors to those to be
suffered in the future invasion of the Japanese home islands. Over 80,000 casualties had been suffered to
capture Iwo Jima and Okinawa. How many would be required in the invasion of
Japan? American casualty
estimates for the invasion of Japan ranged from 190,000 to 1,000,000. As the war in Europe
ended, American troops awaited their transfer to the Pacific to continue the
war against Japan
and American and British diplomats sought assurances from Stalin that he would
send the Soviet Army into action against Japan
as quickly as possible. American troops
hoped to see “The Golden Gate in ‘48,” but pessimists feared that the war
against Japan
could last as long as until 1950.
The Atomic Bomb
·
Describe the Manhattan Project.
·
What factors led President Truman to order the use of the atomic bomb?
·
Describe the effects of the use of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
·
Explain Japan’s eventual decision to surrender.
·
Compare the losses suffered by the major countries in the war.
In August of 1939, Albert Einstein, a Jewish refugee from
Hitler’s Germany,
wrote President Roosevelt warning of the possibility that the Germans could
create a bomb more powerful than anything previously imagined from a controlled
nuclear reaction. The United States and Britain immediately began a race to develop the weapon
before the Germans did.
In December 1942,
American physicists produced a controlled chain reaction in an atomic pile at
the University of Chicago, solving the first great problem in producing an
atomic weapon. There remained the
enormous technical problems of achieving the release of this power in a
bomb. Over the next three years the
government secretly poured nearly $2 billion into the so-called Manhattan Project, a massive scientific effort under the direction
of General Leslie Groves. Hundreds of
scientists, many of them not fully aware of what they were working on, labored
feverishly to complete two complementary projects. At Oak Ridge, Tennessee, scientists worked on the production of fissionable plutonium, the
fuel for an atomic explosion; and at Los
Alamos, New Mexico, under the supervision of J. Robert Oppenheimer, others worked on the construction of a bomb
that could employ the fuel. The war in Europe had ended by the time they were ready to test the first bomb (only
later did they discover that the Germans had never come close to constructing a
usable atomic device); however, the use of an atomic bomb on Japan was seen as a way to avoid the immense casualties
that an invasion would bring.
The bomb was tested at
Los Alamos at 5:30 a.m. on July 16, 1945. It
worked even beyond expectations. The
blast was visible for 180 miles. At
ground zero, the temperature reached one hundred million degrees Fahrenheit. Sand around the bomb was hammered into a
white-hot crater 800 yards in diameter, which no longer even resembled sand,
but had been turned into a jade-green substance resembling hard plastic.
President Harry Truman had been told nothing about
the Manhattan Project until he became president upon FDR’s death in April
1945. Truman was at Potsdam, Germany, meeting with the leaders of the USSR and Britain, when he got word of the successful bomb
test. On July 26, Truman and the other
Allied leaders issued the Potsdam
Declaration, calling on Japan to surrender or face “prompt and utter
destruction.”
In Japan,
a struggle was emerging between the military, who advocated fighting to the
last man, and civilian leaders who hoped for a negotiated peace. After the invasion of Okinawa,
Emperor Hirohito had appointed a new premier, 78 year-old retired admiral Kantaro Suzuki, and gave him instructions to approach the Soviet
Union in hopes that they could mediate peace terms. Despite the emperor’s wishes, Suzuki could
not persuade the Japanese military leaders to give up the fight, and all of the
Japanese leaders refused the Allied demands for unconditional surrender. On July 28, Suzuki proclaimed the Potsdam
Declaration beneath contempt. Less than
a week later, Truman gave the order to use the atomic bomb.
The first bomb was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. Hiroshima,
a city in southwestern Japan
that was the home base of the Second Army, was about the size of Denver. Its many rivers made sighting from the air
simple. Colonel Paul Tibbetts
Jr. and the crew of the Enola Gay dropped a ten-foot uranium bomb dubbed “Little Boy” at 8:15 a.m.:
At about 0815 there was a blinding flash. Some described it as brighter than the sun,
others likened it to a magnesium flash.
Following the flash there was a blast of heat and wind. The large majority of people within 3,000
feet of ground zero were killed immediately.
Within a radius of about 7,000 feet almost every Japanese house
collapsed. Beyond this range and up to
15,000-20,000 feet many of them collapsed and others received serious
structural damage. Persons in the open
were burned on exposed surfaces, and within 3,000-5,000 feet many were burned
to death while others received severe burns through their clothes. In many instances clothing burst into
spontaneous flame and had to be beaten out.
Thousands of people were pinned beneath collapsed buildings or injured
by flying debris. Flying glass
particularly produced many non-lethal injuries….
Shortly after the blast fires began to spring up
over the city. Those who were able made
a mass exodus from the city into the outlying hills. There was no organized activity. The people appeared stunned by the
catastrophe and rushed about as jungle animals suddenly released from a
cage. Some few apparently attempted to
help others from the wreckage, particularly members of their family or
friends. Others assisted those who were
unable to walk alone. However, many of
the injured were left trapped beneath collapsed buildings as people fled by
them in the streets. Pandemonium reigned
as the uninjured and slightly injured fled the city in fearful panic.
The mission report described Hiroshima
as the largest city in the Japanese homeland (except for the religiously
significant Kyoto) that had
remained undamaged by the B-29 incendiary strikes. Although it contained the headquarters of the
Second and Fifth Army Divisions, it had not been previously targeted because it
“lacked significance in manufacture of war material, particularly aircraft
production.” At the time of the bombing,
the city contained 43,000 soldiers and 280,000 to 290,000 civilians. The police department of Hiroshima
calculated that 78,150 died in the bombing, 9,428 were seriously injured,
27,997 slightly injured, and 13,983 missing for a total of 129,558 total
casualties.
It took the Japanese over two days to comprehend what had
happened. The U.S.,
who had only one bomb remaining, was eager to make the Japanese believe that
their supply was unlimited. On August 9,
a second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. Casualties were fewer than Hiroshima
because the city was smaller (270,000) and the bomb missed the city center by
three miles. Still, 38,000 were killed
immediately and estimated total deaths approached 140,000.
Word of the Nagasaki bombing arrived at the Imperial
Palace in Tokyo at the same time as a message that the Soviet Union had
declared war on Japan. For seven hours
the Japanese cabinet debated surrender.
The military remained adamant in holding out for three conditions: that
Japanese officers be allowed to disarm their own troops, accused war criminals
to be tried in Japanese courts, and the terms of the enemy occupation be
determined in advance. Clearly the U.S.
would have turned down these terms. A
second session began at 11:30 p.m.
with the emperor present. The army
leaders continued to argue for “one last battle on Japanese soil.” Finally Suzuki made an unprecedented appeal
to Hirohito. The emperor did not make
political decisions. Hirohito, however,
did not hesitate; he rose and told the conference that their only choice was to
end the war immediately. He then left
the room. It was not until 3:00 a.m. on August 10 that the Japanese cabinet
finally issued a message accepting the terms of the Potsdam Declaration with
the provision that the emperor would remain.
President Truman accepted the preservation of the emperor’s position
despite its exception to the pledge of “unconditional surrender.” On August 15, the Japanese heard their
emperor’s voice for the first time telling them to “endure the unendurable” and
bow to the inevitable. On August 28, the
U.S.S. Missouri sailed into Tokyo
Bay to accept the Japanese
surrender. Some Japanese were still
determined to resist defeat. Kamikaze
pilots plotted to attack the Missouri until Hirohito’s
younger brother, Prince Takamatsu, reached their airfields just in time to
persuade them to give up.
On September 2, 1945,
Japanese officials signed the articles of surrender on board the Missouri:
The Japanese had been piped aboard four minutes
before MacArthur made his appearance: Japanese
Foreign Minister Mamoru Shigemitsu, limping on his
wooden leg, solemn-faced Chief of the Imperial General Staff, Yoshijiro Umezu.
Complete silence greeted them as they ascended the
deck. The American generals watched them
come to attention in their designated places with varying degrees of emotion.
MacArthur stepped out from
a cabin, stood stiffly erect, and began reading with all the mellifluous,
sonorous qualities of his magnificent voice.
The only sign of his emotion was the trembling of the hands in which he
held his paper.
As he closed the introductory remarks he half turned
and faced the Japs with a piercing stare and said: “I
announced it my firm purpose...to insure that the terms of surrender are fully,
promptly and faithfully complied with.”
Shigemitsu, doffing his
silk hat and peeling a yellow glove from his right hand, limped forward to sign
the document and was assisted to a chair.
Umezu followed.
In almost unbroken silence the ship’s crew assembled
as witnesses and watched one delegate after another affix their signatures. Gray, overcast skies had hung over the ship
all during the ceremony. As the New
Zealand delegate stepped forward to sign his
name as the last on the list, the skies parted and the sun shone bright through
the clouds.
MacArthur stepped forward
and said slowly “Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world and that
God will preserve it always.”
He lifted his eyes from the script, faced the
Japanese, and declared: “These proceedings are closed.”
As the Japs departed, gray skies closed in again on the gray
ships, and there was a steady drone in the sky.
The drone became a deafening roar, and a mass of U.S.
planes swept over the ships—400 B29s and 1,500 fleet carrier planes—in a final
salute. Then it was quiet again. The ceremony—and the war—were over.
The greatest war in the history of mankind had finally
come to an end. In all, 61 countries with
1.7 billion people, three-fourths of the world’s population, took part. A total of 110 million persons were mobilized
for military service, more than half of those by three countries: the USSR
(22-30 million), Germany
(17 million), and the United States
(16 million). Fourteen million
combatants died in the struggle. Many
more civilians perished (estimates are over 24,000,000), especially in the Soviet
Union (10,000,000), China
(7,40,000), and Poland
(4,200,000). The United
States suffered only light casualties in
comparison with some other nations, but the totals were frightful nevertheless:
274,000 dead, another 800,000 injured.
After six years of war, the world optimistically looked forward to a
hard-won peace, but already the world’s two strongest nations, the United
States and the Soviet Union,
were developing antagonisms toward one another that would darken the peace for
many decades to come.
Jeffrey T. Stroebel, The Sycamore School, 1996. Revised
2001.