WWII
This second global conflict resulted from the rise of totalitarian, militaristic regimes in Germany,
Italy, and Japan, a phenomenon stemming in part from the Great Depression that
swept over the world in the early 1930s and from the
conditions created by the peace settlements (1919-20) following World War I .
After World War I, defeated Germany, disappointed Italy, and
ambitious Japan were anxious to regain or increase their power; all three
eventually adopted forms of dictatorship that made the state supreme and called for expansion at the expense of
neighboring countries. These three countries also set themselves up as champions
against Communism, thus gaining at least partial tolerance of their early
actions from the more conservative groups in the Western democracies. Also
important was a desire for peace on the part of the democracies, which resulted
in their military unpreparedness. Finally, the League of Nations , weakened from
the start by the defection of the United States, was unable to promote
disarmament; moreover, the long economic
depression sharpened national rivalries, increased fear and distrust, and made
the masses susceptible to the promises of demagogues.
The failure of the League to stop the Second Sino-Japanese War in
1931 was followed by a rising crescendo of treaty violations and acts of
aggression. Adolf Hitler , when he rose to power (1933) in Germany, recreated
the German army and prepared it for a war of conquest; in 1936 he remilitarized
the Rhineland. Benito Mussolini conquered (1935-36) Ethiopia for Italy; and from
1936 to 1939 the Spanish civil war raged, with Germany and Italy helping the
fascist forces of Francisco Franco to victory. In Mar., 1938, Germany annexed
Austria, and in Sept., 1938, the British and French policy of appeasement toward
the Axis reached its height with the sacrifice of much of Czechoslovakia to
Germany in the Munich Pact .
When Germany occupied (Mar., 1939) all of Czechoslovakia, and when
Italy seized (Apr., 1939) Albania, Great Britain and France abandoned their
policy of appeasement and set about creating an “antiaggression” front, which
included alliances with Turkey, Greece, Romania, and Poland, and speeding
rearmament. Germany and Italy signed (May, 1939) a full military alliance, and
after the Soviet-German nonaggression pact (Aug., 1939) removed German fear of a
possible two-front war, Germany was ready to launch an attack on Poland.
World War II began on Sept. 1, 1939, when Germany, without a
declaration of war, invaded Poland. Britain and France declared war on Germany
on Sept. 3, and all the members of the Commonwealth of Nations, except Ireland,
rapidly followed suit. The fighting in Poland was brief. The German blitzkrieg,
or lightning war, with its use of new techniques of mechanized and air warfare,
crushed the Polish defenses, and the conquest was almost complete when Soviet
forces entered (Sept. 17) E Poland. While this campaign ended with the partition
of Poland and while the USSR defeated Finland in the Finnish-Russian War
(1939-40), the British and the French spent an inactive winter behind the
Maginot Line , content with blockading Germany by sea.
The inactive period ended with the surprise invasion (Apr. 9,
1940) of Denmark and Norway by the Germans. Denmark offered no resistance;
Norway was conquered by June 9. On May 10, German forces overran Luxembourg and
invaded the Netherlands and Belgium; on May 13 they outflanked the Maginot Line.
Their armored columns raced to the English Channel and cut off Flanders, and
Allied forces were evacuated from Dunkirk (May 26-June 4). General Weygand had
replaced General Gamelin as supreme Allied commander, but was unable to stop the
Allied debacle in the “battle of France.” On June 22, France signed an armistice
with Germany, followed by an armistice with Italy, which had entered the war on
June 10. The Vichy government was set up in France under Marshal Pétain .
Britain, the only remaining Allied power, resisted, under the inspiring
leadership of Winston Churchill , the German attempt to bomb it into submission.
While Germany was receiving its first setback in the Battle of
Britain , fought entirely in the air, the theater of war was widened by the
Italian attack on the British in North Africa by the Italian invasion (Oct. 28, 1940) of Greece, and by German submarine
warfare in the Atlantic Ocean. Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria joined the Axis
late in 1940, but Yugoslavia resisted German pressure, and on Apr. 6, 1941,
Germany launched attacks on Yugoslavia and Greece and won rapid victories. In
May, Crete fell.
Great Britain gained a new ally on June 22, 1941, when Germany
(joined by Italy, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Finland), invaded the Soviet
Union. By Dec., 1941, German mechanized divisions had destroyed a substantial
part of the Soviet army and had overrun much of European Russia. However, the
harsh Russian winter halted the German sweep, and the drive on Moscow was foiled
by a Soviet counteroffensive.
Though determined to maintain its neutrality, the United States
was gradually drawn closer to the war by the force of events. To save Britain
from collapse the Congress voted lend-lease aid early in 1941. In Aug., 1941,
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt met Churchill on the high seas, and together
they formulated the Atlantic Charter as a general statement of democratic aims.
To establish bases to protect its shipping from attacks by German submarines,
the United States occupied (Apr., 1941) Greenland and later shared in the
occupation of Iceland; despite repeated warnings, the attacks continued.
Relations with Germany became increasingly strained, and the aggressive acts of
Japan in China, Indochina, and Thailand provoked protests from the United
States.
Efforts to reach a peaceful settlement were ended on Dec. 7, 1941,
when Japan without warning attacked Pearl Harbor , the Philippines, and Malaya.
War was declared (Dec. 8) on Japan by the United States, the Commonwealth of
Nations (except Ireland), and the Netherlands. Within a few days Germany and
Italy declared war on the United States. The first phase of the war in the
Pacific was disastrous for the Allies. Japan swiftly conquered the Philippines
(where strong resistance ended at Corregidor), Malaya, Burma (Myanmar),
Netherlands East Indies (Indonesia), and many Pacific islands; destroyed an
Allied fleet in the Java Sea; and reached, by mid-1942, its furthest points of
advance in the Aleutian Islands and New Guinea.
Australia became the chief Allied base for the countermoves
against Japan, directed by Gen. Douglas MacArthur , Admiral Nimitz , and Admiral
Halsey . The first Allied naval successes against Japan were scored in the
battles of the Coral Sea and Midway, where U.S. bombers knocked out the major
part of Japan's carrier fleet and forced Japan into retreat. Midway was the
first decisive blow against the Axis by Allied forces. On land the Allies took
the offensive in New Guinea and landed (Aug. 7, 1942) on Guadalcanal in the
Solomon Islands.
Despite the slightly improved position in the Pacific, the late
summer of 1942 was perhaps the darkest period of the war for the Allies. In
North Africa, the Axis forces under Field Marshal Rommel were sweeping into
Egypt; in Russia, they had penetrated the Caucasus and launched a gigantic
offensive against Stalingrad. In the Atlantic, even to the
shores of the United States and in the Gulf of Mexico, German submarines were
sinking Allied shipping at an unprecedented rate.
Yet the Axis war machine showed signs of wear, while the United
States was merely beginning to realize its potential, and Russia had huge
reserves and was receiving U.S. lend-lease aid through Iran and the port of
Murmansk. The major blow, however, was leveled at the Axis by Britain, when
General Montgomery routed Rommel at Alamein in North Africa (Oct., 1942). This
was followed by the American invasion of Algeria (Nov. 8, 1942); the Americans
and British were joined by Free French forces of General de Gaulle and by
regular French forces that had passed to the Allies after the surrender of
Admiral Darlan . After heavy fighting in Tunisia, North Africa was cleared of
Axis forces by May 12, 1943.
Meantime, in the Soviet stand at Stalingrad and counteroffensive
resulted in the surrender (Feb. 2, 1943) of the German 6th Army, followed by
nearly uninterrupted Russian advances. In the Mediterranean, the Allies followed
up their African victory by the conquest of Sicily (July-Aug., 1943) and the
invasion of Italy, which surrendered on Sept. 8. However, the German army in
Italy fought bloody rearguard actions, and Rome fell (June 4, 1944) only after
the battles of Monte Cassino and Anzio . In the Atlantic, the submarine threat
was virtually ended by the summer of 1944. Throughout German-occupied Europe,
underground forces, largely supplied by the Allies, began to wage war against
their oppressors.
The Allies, who had signed (Jan. 1, 1942) the United Nations
declaration, were drawn closer together militarily by the Casablanca Conference
, at which they pledged to continue the war until the unconditional surrender of
the Axis, and by the Moscow Conferences , the Quebec Conference , the Cairo
Conference , and the Tehran Conference . The invasion of German-held France was
decided upon, and Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was put in charge of the operation.
By the beginning of 1944 air warfare had turned overwhelmingly in
favor of the Allies, who wrought unprecedented destruction on many German cities
and on transport and industries throughout German-held Europe. This air
offensive prepared the way for the landing (June 6, 1944) of the Allies in N
France and a secondary landing (Aug. 15) in S France.
After heavy fighting in Normandy, Allied armored divisions raced to the Rhine,
clearing most of France and Belgium of German forces by Oct., 1944. The use of
V-1 and V-2 rockets by the Germans proved as futile an effort as their
counteroffensive in Belgium under General von Rundstedt.
On the Eastern Front Soviet armies swept (1944) through the Baltic
States, E Poland, Belorussia, and Ukraine and forced the capitulation of Romania
(Aug. 23), Finland (Sept. 4), and Bulgaria (Sept. 10). Having evacuated the
Balkan Peninsula, the Germans resisted in Hungary until Feb., 1945, but Germany
itself was pressed. The Russians entered East Prussia and Czechoslovakia (Jan.,
1945) and took E Germany to the Oder.
On Mar. 7 the Western Allieswhose chief commanders in the field
were Omar N. Bradley and Montgomerycrossed the Rhine after having smashed
through the strongly fortified Siegfried Line and overran W Germany. German
collapse came after the meeting (Apr. 25) of the Western and Russian armies at
Torgau in Saxony, and after Hitler's death amid the ruins of Berlin, which was
falling to the Russians under marshals Zhukov and Konev . The unconditional
surrender of Germany was signed at Reims on May 7 and ratified at Berlin on May
8.
After the completion of the campaigns in the Solomon Islands (late
1943) and New Guinea (1944), the Allied advance moved inexorably, in two lines
that converged on Japan, through scattered island groupsthe Philippines, the
Mariana Islands, Okinawa, and Iwo Jima. Japan, with most of its navy sunk,
staggered beneath these blows. At the Yalta Conference , the USSR secretly
promised its aid against Japan, which still refused to surrender even after the
Allied appeal made at the Potsdam Conference . On Aug. 6, 1945, the United
States first used the atomic bomb and devastated Hiroshima ; on Aug. 9, the
second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki . The USSR had already invaded Manchuria. On
Aug. 14, Japan announced its surrender, formally signed aboard the U.S.
battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay on Sept. 2.
Although hostilities came to an end in Sept., 1945, a new world
crisis caused by the postwar conflict between the USSR and the United Statesthe
two chief powers to emerge from the warmade settlement difficult. By Mar., 1950,
peace treaties had been signed with Italy, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and
Finland; in 1951, the Allies (except the USSR) signed a treaty with Japan, and,
in 1955, Austria was restored to sovereignty. Germany, however, remained
dividedfirst between the Western powers and the USSR, then (until 1990) into two
German nations.
Despite the birth of the United Nations , the world remained
politically unstable and only slowly recovered from the incalculable physical
and moral devastation wrought by the largest and most costly war in history.
Soldiers and civilians both had suffered in bombings that had wiped out entire
cities. Modern methods of warfaretogether with the attempt of Germany to
exterminate entire religious and ethnic groups (particularly the Jews )famines,
and epidemics, had brought death to tens of millions and made as many more
homeless. The suffering and degradation of the war's victims were of proportions
that passed the understanding of those who had been spared. The conventions of
warfare had been violated on a large scale, and warfare itself
was revolutionized by the development and use of nuclear weapons.
Political consequences included the reduction of Britain and
France to powers of lesser rank, the emergence of the Common Market, the independence of many former
colonies in Asia and Africa, and, perhaps most important, the beginning of the
cold war between the Western powers and the Communist-bloc nations.
Information provided by encyclopedia.com