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Controversies Among Allied Leaders and Post-War Conflict

Learn how disagreements over war strategies between the Big Three Allied leaders led to post-war conflict between the United States and the USSR, including delays in opening a second front in Europe, Soviet participation in the Pacific war, and the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

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Controversies Among Allied Leaders and Post-War Conflict

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  1. Explain how controversies among the Big Three Allied leaders over war strategies led to post-war conflict between the United States and the USSR, including delays in the opening of the second front in Europe, the participation of the Soviet Union in the war in the Pacific, and the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 7.3

  2. Hitler and the Nazis hated Communism(Fascism hated communism) ***Yet Hitler didn’t want the Soviets fighting in 1939 ***Stalin wasn’t ready for entering war either ***Signed a Non-Aggression Pact (neither side would attack each other)

  3. Allied leaders, Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin and DeGaulle met throughout the war to plan strategy and make post-war plans

  4. ***Hitler attacked the Soviet Union in June of 1941. (violated Non-Aggression Pact) • Stalin wanted the United States and the allies to go into France to open a second front. However, Churchill and Roosevelt did not feel their armies were ready for an invasion of France. • Instead they attacked the Germans in North Africa because Axis control of the area prevented the Allies from using the Suez Canal. • The Allies successfully launched ***Operation Torchin November of 1942. • (Military operation to defeat Axis Powers in North Africa) Major Points of the War

  5. Operation “Torch”

  6. Goal of Operation torch…takeover Northern Africa Then…. Attack Italy to invade Europe from the south

  7. June 1941 Hitler decided the time had come to attack Russia, violating the Non-Aggression Pact he signed with Stalin. • The Germans quickly advanced into Russia raping, pillaging, executing, and burning large numbers of homes and people. (the favor was re-paid) • ***Operation Barbarossa- name of Nazi operation to invade USSR • The Germans spearheads got within 30 miles of Moscow when they were stopped by the Russian Army and a brutal winter. Invasion of the Soviet Union and the Battle of Stalingrad

  8. Nazi tanks invading the Soviet Union

  9. Russian Priest and Nazi Officer

  10. They were also stopped from capturing Stalingrad. The Russians held on to the city after fierce fighting and winter came to their aid. • Then the Soviets attacked and surrounded a large German Army. • Eventually, the Germans had to surrender and lost 100,000 men captured. • ***This was the turning point of the war for the Russians (battle of Stalingrad). They were on the offensive from this point onward.

  11. ***The Big Three- Stalin, Roosevelt, Churchill met at the Tehran Conference in December of 1943. Stalin was desperate for an invasion of France to open a second front. • ***WOULD ONLY ACCEPT THE UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER OF HITLER & the NAZIS • ***Dwight D. Eisenhower was named commander of all allied forces in Europe for… • ***Operation Overlord- military operation to invade northern Europe to defeat the Nazis. • ***The allies assembled over 3 million men and on June 6th, 1944the D-Day invasion got under way. • After establishing a foothold at Normandy, France, the allied armies started to march across France. On August 25th, 1944 Paris was liberated. Planning for D-Day- The Tehran Conference

  12. D-Day invasion Map

  13. D-Day Memorial in Bedford, VA

  14. The Big Three

  15. The Germans fought fiercely as the allies pushed into their homeland. • ***They mounted one last ditch German offensive and tried to divide the allied armies. • The Germans never pierced the lines, but they did create a huge bulge in the lines. • ***This battle signified the beginning of the end for the Germans • ***Now Allies are marching from the South (Italy), West (France), and East (Russia) towards Berlin The Battle of the Bulge:

  16. Battle of the Bulge

  17. American soldiers advancing on Germany

  18. ***The Japanese attacked the U.S. held island at Midway and were heavily favored to win. • However, an unexpected US victory stopped the Japanese advance in the Pacific and out them on the defensive. • From this point on the U.S. began a process of ***Island Hopping- attacking one island at a time and securing it to get closer to Japan • Guadalcanal • The Philippines • Iwo Jima • Okinawa War in the Pacific

  19. Okinawa was at the southern end of the Japanese homelands. The next step would be to invade Japan itself. • The battles of the island hopping campaign demonstrated the tenacity of the Japanese soldier. • It was estimated that 1,000,000 U.S. causalities would be sustained. • There was another option opened up by the ***Manhattan Projectthat developed and tested this first Atomic Bomb in New Mexico • ***The new President Harry Truman ordered the two bombs be dropped and on August 6th, 1945 Hiroshimawas bombed. On August 9thNagasakiwas bombed. • ***Japan surrendered on August 14th, 1945 (V-J Day) and World War II was over. Winning the War in the Pacific

  20. Manhattan Project Lab

  21. Tested in the New Mexico desert

  22. Hiroshima bombing

  23. “Fat Man”: Nagasaki

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