The Allied forces utilized an island-hopping strategy in the Pacific to cut off Japanese supply lines, allowing them to bypass heavily fortified islands and move more quickly towards Japan. This included battles to retake the Philippines and the bloody fights for Iwo Jima and Okinawa, where kamikaze attacks inflicted heavy American losses. Concerned that Germany was developing an atomic bomb, Roosevelt launched the secret Manhattan Project to develop one first, with field tests beginning in 1945. After the deaths of Roosevelt and Hitler, the new presidents Truman and Stalin agreed to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, leading Japan to surrender on August 14th and ending World War II.
The Allied forces utilized an island-hopping strategy in the Pacific to cut off Japanese supply lines, allowing them to bypass heavily fortified islands and move more quickly towards Japan. This included battles to retake the Philippines and the bloody fights for Iwo Jima and Okinawa, where kamikaze attacks inflicted heavy American losses. Concerned that Germany was developing an atomic bomb, Roosevelt launched the secret Manhattan Project to develop one first, with field tests beginning in 1945. After the deaths of Roosevelt and Hitler, the new presidents Truman and Stalin agreed to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, leading Japan to surrender on August 14th and ending World War II.
The Allied forces utilized an island-hopping strategy in the Pacific to cut off Japanese supply lines, allowing them to bypass heavily fortified islands and move more quickly towards Japan. This included battles to retake the Philippines and the bloody fights for Iwo Jima and Okinawa, where kamikaze attacks inflicted heavy American losses. Concerned that Germany was developing an atomic bomb, Roosevelt launched the secret Manhattan Project to develop one first, with field tests beginning in 1945. After the deaths of Roosevelt and Hitler, the new presidents Truman and Stalin agreed to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, leading Japan to surrender on August 14th and ending World War II.
The Allied forces utilized an island-hopping strategy in the Pacific to cut off Japanese supply lines, allowing them to bypass heavily fortified islands and move more quickly towards Japan. This included battles to retake the Philippines and the bloody fights for Iwo Jima and Okinawa, where kamikaze attacks inflicted heavy American losses. Concerned that Germany was developing an atomic bomb, Roosevelt launched the secret Manhattan Project to develop one first, with field tests beginning in 1945. After the deaths of Roosevelt and Hitler, the new presidents Truman and Stalin agreed to drop atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, leading Japan to surrender on August 14th and ending World War II.
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The Allied victory
Struggle for the Islands
From the battle of Guadalcanal, American forces began to implement a military strategy: the island-hopping. They decided to attack selectively enemy-held islands and bypassing the others. By capturing only a few crucial islands, the Americans cut off the islands from supplies and reinforcements and these islands became useless to the Japanese. This strategy allowed the Americans to move more quickly toward their ultimate goal Japan itself. The Philippines Campaign As American forces pushed toward Japan in the summer of 1944, military planners decided to bypass the Philippine Islands. MacArthur vigorously opposed this strategy, claiming that the United States had an obligation to free the Filipino people. The general's arguments persuaded Roosevelt, who reversed the decision. In October 1944, some 160,000 American troops invaded the Philippine island of Leyte. After the beach was secure, General MacArthur went on the island proclaimed: "People of the Philippines, I have returned." While American troops fought their way inland, the greatest naval battle in world history developed off the coast. More than 280 warships took part in the three-day Battle of Leyte Gulf. This was the first battle in which Japanese kamikazes, or suicide planes, were used. Kamikaze pilots loaded their aircraft with bombs and then deliberately crashed them into enemy ships to inflict maximum damage. Despite this tactic, the American force destroyed the Japanese navy and emerged victorious. The Battle of Iwo Jima One of the bloodiest battles of the war took place on the tiny volcanic island of Iwo Jima. The number of loses increased more and more as American troops moved closer to Japan. The specificity of this island is that the rocky slopes were composed of caves and tunnels, where the Japanese protected more than 600 cannons.
In November 1944, American bombers began bomb Iwo Jima. In
February 1945, marines stormed the beaches. They encountered furious resistance from the Japanese. After three days of fighting, the marines had advanced only 600 meters inland. Nearly 110,000 American troops took part in the campaign. Although opposed by only 25,000 Japanese, the marines needed almost a month to secure the island. The enemy fought almost to the last defender. Only 216 Japanese were taken prisoner. The Battle of Okinawa The Battle of Okinawa took place from April to June 1945. The island of Okinawa was the last obstacle between the American troops and Japan. The Japanese flew nearly 2,000 kamikaze attacks against the 1,300 warships of the American fleet. The Americans lost 50,000 men in the battle which was the costliest engagement of the Pacific war. At the end, the American forces were victorious, and the Allies had a clear path to Japan. The Manhattan Project In August 1939, Roosevelt received a letter from Albert Einstein, a brilliant Jewish physicist who had fled from Europe. In his letter, Einstein suggested that an incredibly powerful new type of bomb could be built by the Germans. Roosevelt organized the top-secret Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb before the Germans. On July 16, 1945, Manhattan Project scientists field-tested the worlds first atomic bomb in the desert of New Mexico. With a blinding flash of light, the explosion blew a huge crater in the earth and shattered windows some 200 km away. Once the bomb was ready, President Harry Truman, who took office after Roosevelts sudden death, made the ultimate decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan. End of the War On August 6, 1945, an American plane, the Enola Gay, dropped a single atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. A blast
of intense heat annihilated the citys center and its residents in
an instantleading to as many as 80,000 deaths. Three days later, a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. On August 14, the government of Japan surrendered. On September 2, 1945, the formal surrender agreement was signed. The long and destructive war had finally come to an end.