CH 32 Sec 4 - The Allied Victory PDF
CH 32 Sec 4 - The Allied Victory PDF
CH 32 Sec 4 - The Allied Victory PDF
D-Day
Battle of the
Bulge
kamikaze
SETTING THE STAGE On December 22, 1941, just after Pearl Harbor,
Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt met at the White House to develop a
joint war policy. Stalin had asked his allies to relieve German pressure on his
armies in the east. He wanted them to open a second front in the west. This would
split the Germans strength by forcing them to fight major battles in two regions
instead of one. Churchill agreed with Stalins strategy. The Allies would weaken
Germany on two fronts before dealing a deathblow. At first, Roosevelt was torn,
but ultimately he agreed.
TAKING NOTES
Recognizing Effects
Use a chart to identify
the outcomes of several
major World War II
battles.
Battle
Outcome
Battle of
El Alamein
Battle of
Stalingrad
D-Day
Invasion
940 Chapter 32
Rommel took the key Libyan port city of Tobruk in June 1942. With Tobruks
fall, London sent General Bernard MontgomeryMonty to his troopsto
take control of British forces in North Africa. By the time Montgomery arrived,
however, the Germans had advanced to an Egyptian village called El Alamein
(ALuhMAYN), west of Alexandria. (See the map on page 942.) They were dug
in so well that British forces could not go around them. The only way to dislodge
them, Montgomery decided, was with a massive frontal attack. The Battle of El
Alamein began on the night of October 23. The roar of about 1,000 British guns
took the Axis soldiers totally by surprise. They fought back fiercely and held
their ground for several days. By November 4, however, Rommels army had
been beaten. He and his forces fell back.
As Rommel retreated west, the Allies launched Operation Torch. On
November 8, an Allied force of more than 100,000 troopsmostly Americans
landed in Morocco and Algeria. American general Dwight D. Eisenhower led
this force. Caught between Montgomerys and Eisenhowers armies, Rommels
Afrika Korps was finally crushed in May 1943.
Page 2 of 8
Making
Inferences
What advantages might a
weaker army fighting on its home soil
have over a
stronger invading
army?
Soviet troops
launch an attack
during the battle
for Stalingrad.
The Invasion of Italy As the Battle of Stalingrad raged, Stalin continued to urge
the British and Americans to invade France. However, Roosevelt and Churchill
decided to attack Italy first. On July 10, 1943, Allied forces landed on Sicily and
captured it from Italian and German troops about a month later.
The conquest of Sicily toppled Mussolini from power. On July 25, King Victor
Emmanuel III had the dictator arrested. On September 3, Italy surrendered. But
the Germans seized control of northern Italy and put Mussolini back in charge.
Finally, the Germans retreated northward, and the victorious Allies entered Rome
on June 4, 1944. Fighting in Italy, however, continued until Germany fell in May
1945. On April 27, 1945, Italian resistance fighters ambushed some German
trucks near the northern Italian city of Milan. Inside one of the trucks, they found
Mussolini disguised as a German soldier. They shot him the next day and later
hung his body in downtown Milan for all to see.
Page 3 of 8
40 E
Arctic Circle
Axis nations, 1938
Axis-controlled, 1942
Allies
Neutral nations
Allied advances
Major Battles
FINLAND
NORWAY
60 N
Leningrad
SWEDEN
S OV I E T
UNION
Berlin
(1945)
NETH.
19
1944
42
London
GERMANY
Dunkirk
lish
1944
Eng nnel
a
Normandy
Ch
(1944) Paris
1945
Warsaw
(194445)
BEL
G.
Battle of the
Bulge (194445)
LUX.
1944
FRANCE
Minsk
(1944)
1944
1944
5
194
OSLOV
AKIA
1945
1944
Y
RIA
GAR
AUST
N
U
SWITZ.
H
ROMANIA
YU
ITALY
GO
SL
AV
IA
BULGARIA
Stalingrad
(194243)
1943
Caspian
Sea
ALBA
NIA
Black Sea
IRAN
1943
Mediterranean Sea
194
250 Miles
SYRIA
LEBANON
IRAQ
Tobruk
194
( Fr. )
PALESTINE
1942
El Alamein
(1942)
Alexandria
TRANSJORDAN
L I BYA ( I t . )
500 Kilometers
942 Chapter 32
1943
R.
Crete
ALGERIA
er
TURKEY
44
19
(Fr.)
ep
Tunis (1943)
MOROCCO
(Fr.)
Dn
i
40 N
GREECE
TUNISIA
Casablanca (1942)
Kursk
(1943)
Sicily (1943)
Algiers (1942)
Oran (1942)
1942
1943
1944
PORTUGAL
Anzio
(1944)
S PA I N
43
19
POLAND
CZECH
Rome
942
Smolensk
44
19
IRELAND
EAST
PRUSSIA
Vol
ga R
UNITED
KINGDOM
Moscow
Baltic
Sea
North DENMARK
Sea
EGYPT
SAUDI
ARABIA
Tropic of Cancer
Page 4 of 8
Vocabulary
rationed: distributed
in limited amounts
Analyzing Motives
Why did U.S.
government propaganda try to portray
the Japanese as
sinister?
Pearl Harbor, a wave of prejudice arose in the United States against Japanese
Americans. Most lived in Hawaii and on the West Coast. The bombing of Pearl Harbor
frightened Americans. This fear, encouraged by government propaganda, was turned
against Japanese Americans. They were suddenly seen as the enemy. On February
19, 1942, President Roosevelt issued an executive order calling for the internment of
Japanese Americans because they were considered a threat to the country.
In March, the military began rounding up aliens and shipping them to relocation camps. The camps were restricted military areas located far away from the
coast. Such locations, it was thought, would prevent these enemy aliens from
assisting a Japanese invasion. However, two-thirds of those interned were Nisei,
native-born American citizens whose parents were Japanese. Many of them volunteered for military service and fought bravely for the United States, even though
their families remained in the camps.
Victory in Europe
While the Allies were dealing with issues on the home front, they also were preparing to push toward victory in Europe. In 1943, the Allies began secretly building
an invasion force in Great Britain. Their plan was to launch an attack on Germanheld France across the English Channel.
The D-Day Invasion By May 1944, the invasion force was ready. Thousands of
planes, ships, tanks, and landing craft and more than three million troops awaited
the order to attack. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the commander of this enormous force, planned to strike on the coast of Normandy, in northwestern France.
The Germans knew that an attack was coming. But they did not know where it
would be launched. To keep Hitler guessing, the Allies set up a huge dummy army
with its own headquarters and equipment. This make-believe army appeared to be
preparing to attack the French seaport of Calais (kaLAY).
World War II 943
London
UNITED KINGDOM
Portsmouth
Portland
Torquay
Calais
AH
UT ACH
BE
Ste.-Mre Eglise
POINTE-DU-HOC
Vierville
Colleville
Isigny Trvires
10 Miles
Carentan
0
100 Miles
FRANCE
0
La Madeleine
ish
Engl nel
C h a n Cherbourg
to St.-L
OMAHA
BEACH
GOLD
BEACH
JUNO
BEACH
Arromanches
Courseulles
Bayeux
200 Kilometers
SWORD
BEACH
Lion
20 Kilometers
944 Chapter 32
Allied forces
Flooded areas
Glider landing areas
Dover
Straits of
Dover
50 N
Quinville
2 E
English Channel
4 W
2 W
Page 5 of 8
Caen
Vocabulary
beachheads: enemy
shoreline captured
just before invading
forces move inland
Page 6 of 8
Germanys Unconditional Surrender After the Battle of the Bulge, the war in
Europe rapidly drew to a close. In late March 1945, the Allies rolled across the
Rhine River into Germany. By the middle of April, a noose was closing around
Berlin. About three million Allied soldiers approached Berlin from the southwest.
Another six million Soviet troops approached from the east. By April 25, 1945, the
Soviets had surrounded the capital and were pounding the city with artillery fire.
While Soviet shells burst over Berlin, Hitler prepared for his end in an underground headquarters beneath the crumbling city. On April 29, he married his longtime companion, Eva Braun. The next day, Hitler and Eva Braun committed
suicide. Their bodies were then carried outside and burned.
On May 7, 1945, General Eisenhower accepted the unconditional surrender of the
Third Reich from the German military. President Roosevelt, however, did not live to
witness the long-awaited victory. He had died suddenly on April 12, as Allied armies
were advancing toward Berlin. Roosevelts successor, Harry Truman, received the
news of the Nazi surrender. On May 9, the surrender was officially signed in Berlin.
The United States and other Allied powers celebrated V-E DayVictory in Europe
Day. After nearly six years of fighting, the war in Europe had ended.
Vocabulary
In October, Allied forces landed on the island of Leyte (LAYtee) in the Philippines.
General Douglas MacArthur, who had been ordered to leave the islands before
their surrender in May 1942, waded ashore at Leyte
with his troops. On reaching the beach, he declared,
People of the Philippines, I have returned.
Actually, the takeover would not be quite that easy.
The Japanese had devised a bold plan to halt the
Allied advance. They would destroy the American
fleet, thus preventing the Allies from resupplying their
ground troops. This plan, however, required risking
almost the entire Japanese fleet. They took this gamble on October 23, in the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Within
four days, the Japanese navy had lost disastrously
eliminating it as a fighting force in the war. Now, only
the Japanese army and the feared kamikaze stood
between the Allies and Japan. The kamikazes were
Japanese suicide pilots. They would sink Allied ships
by crash-diving their bomb-filled planes into them.
In March 1945, after a month of bitter fighting
and heavy losses, American Marines took Iwo
Jima (EEwuh JEEmuh), an island 760 miles from
Tokyo. On April 1, U.S. troops moved onto the island
of Okinawa, only about 350 miles from southern
Japan. The Japanese put up a desperate fight.
Nevertheless, on June 21, one of the bloodiest land
battles of the war ended. The Japanese lost over
100,000 troops, and the Americans 12,000.
U.S. marines
raise the Stars and
Stripes after their
victory at Iwo Jima.
Page 7 of 8
Patterns of Interaction
Arming for War: Modern and Medieval Weapons
Just as in World War I, the conflicts of World War II spurred the
development of ever more powerful weapons. Mightier tanks, more
elusive submarines, faster fighter planesall emerged from this period.
From ancient times to the present day, the pattern remains the same:
Every new weapon causes other countries to develop weapons of
similar or greater force. This pattern results in a deadly race for an
ultimate weapon: for example, the atomic bomb.
Nagasaki citizens trudge through the still smoldering ruins
of their city in this photograph by Yosuke Yamahata.
Ground temperatures
7,000F
Energy released
Buildings destroyed
62,000 buildings
Killed immediately
70,000 people
140,000 people
200,000 people
946
Page 8 of 8
J. Robert
Oppenheimer (left)
and General Leslie
Groves inspect the
site of the first
atomic bomb test
near Alamogordo,
New Mexico.
ASSESSMENT
TERMS & NAMES 1. For each term or name, write a sentence explaining its significance.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Battle of Stalingrad
D-Day
kamikaze
MAIN IDEAS
Outcome
Japanese surrender?
D-Day
Invasion