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America and World War II

America and World War II. Pushing the Axis Back. Striking Back at the Third Reich. Casablanca Conference Strategic Bombing Striking at the “Soft Underbelly” Italy was considered to be the weak area of Europe Sicily was captured July 19, 1943

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America and World War II

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  1. America and World War II Pushing the Axis Back

  2. Striking Back at the Third Reich • Casablanca Conference • Strategic Bombing • Striking at the “Soft Underbelly” • Italy was considered to be the weak area of Europe • Sicily was captured July 19, 1943 • The attack on Sicily created a crisis within the Italian government • The king of Italy and a group of Italian generals decided to arrest Mussolini and announce Italy’s surrender. • Germany continued to fight in Italy against the Allies.

  3. Roosevelt/Churchill Meet Stalin at Tehran, Iran • The three leaders agreed on several issues: • Stalin agreed to launch a full scale offensive against Germany when the Allies invaded France • Germany was to be broken up so as to never start another war • Stalin agreed that once Germany was beaten the Soviet Union would help the United States defeat Japan • Stalin agreed to help set up an international organization to help keep peace after the war (United Nations)

  4. Landing in France • General Dwight D. Eisenhower was chosen to lead the invasion of France • Operation Overload

  5. Planning Operation Overload • Hitler fortified the coast of France • The Allies had one advantage—the element of surprise. • Hitler believed the Allies would land in Pas-de-Calais • To convince the Germans they were right, the Allies placed inflated rubber tanks, empty tents, and dummy landing craft along the coast across from Calais

  6. The term “D-day” • Eisenhower’s planning staff referred to the day any operation began by the letter D. • The date for the invasion, therefore, came to be known as D-day.

  7. The Longest Day • Nearly 7,000 ships,100,000 soldiers, and 23,000 paratroopers set sail for Normandy on June 6, 1944 • Normandy was divided into beaches code named “Utah”, “Omaha”, “Gold”, “Sword”, and “Juno”. • The landings at “Utah”, “Gold”, “Sword”, and “Juno” went very well (less than 200 casualties at “Utah” beach). • The American forces landing at “Omaha” beach had a difficult time (over 2,500 killed or wounded)

  8. Driving the Japanese Back • Island Hopping in the Pacific • Coral reefs made it difficult for landing craft to release troops onto the beaches. Casualties were very high as troops were forced to wade ashore under enemy fire. (Over 1000 Marines died at Tarawa) • MacArthur Returns to the Philippines • The Battle of Leyte Gulf • Kamikaze Attacks: “divine wind” in Japanese, kamikaze pilots deliberately crashed their planes into American ships

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