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Transcript of AMERICA IN WORLD WAR II CHAPTER 35. The Allies Trade Space For Time After Pearl Harbor, the free...
The Allies Trade Space For Time
After Pearl Harbor, the free world was on the edge of disaster
Japan running amok in Pacific and Germany might drive England to the wall before US aid could stem the tide.
ABC-1 agreement Why is stopping Hitler a bigger priority?. Plan: Devote enough energy to Japan to keep them from
getting any more and begin to try to drive them back, but make Europe the first priority. This strategy criticized by public, pacific commanders, China
and far-east allies, but was sound.
Revving the Economic Engine
US had massive economic potential, but needed time to get geared up.
Wasn’t clear that had time. England in desperate shape. America needed to time to convert
factories to all-out war production. Fear that skilled German scientists would
come up with dramatic new weapons. Had to feed and arm itself and allies.
The Shock Of War National unity wasn’t a problem—Pearl Harbor
had silenced isolationists. US communists and socialists fully backed the war.
Why? No government witch hunts against American
Germans or most Japanese-Americans. Why? Exception: West-Coast Japanese,
110,000 interned in concentration camps. Why? Most interned were well integrated into US Lost millions in earnings and property. Upheld by Supreme Court in Korematsu v. U.S. Apologize in 1988 and pay reparations.
Building The War Machine
War snapped US out of the depression.
Full employment. War Production Board. Henry J. Kaiser -Ship-building
king
Rationing
War production board halted manufacture of non-essential items
War industries had first priority in transport and raw materials
National speed limit and gas rationing.
Food Rationing Farmers have bumper crops
and boom time.
Economic Bumps
War caused Inflation. Why? WPB response. Unions gave no-strike pledge, but hated
wage caps and some staged labor stoppages. Mine workers under John L. Lewis were the
worst. Roosevelt took a tough stance.
1943 Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act
Manpower Shortage
15 Million men served in WWII.
216,000 women served in military in one capacity or another WAACS (Army) ,
WAVES (Navy) Severe manpower
shortage at home. Braceros.
Rosie the Riveter
6 Million women took jobs outside the home; over half had never worked before. Rosie the Riveter.
Effect on Women’s movement
2/3 left or lost their jobs after war.
Wartime Migrations
Reason for wartime migrations. Detroit and LA, Dallas 1.6 million blacks moved from the south. New race problems in northern cities. Blacks resent their treatment. FDR issues executive order prohibiting
discrimination in defense industries Fair Employment Practices Commission.
Blacks Demand Fairness
Blacks adopt the Double V slogan. Military segregation
NAACP membership shoots up and Congress for Racial Equality is established (CORE)
Move north continues after the war.
Creation of Sun Belt
Economic Effect of War
Americans at home suffered very little from the war, especially when contrasted to the Brits and Russians.
War invigorated the US economy to an unprecedented level. GNP doubled from 1940 to 1945 and pay checks went way up.
Disposable income more than doubled, but not much to spend on because all factories devoted to war.
The war, even more than the New Deal, leads to the Big Government of the second half of the 20th Century.
Federal Spending
All the federal spending finally cures the depression.
War cost $330 billion. Where did money come from?
Forced US to borrow at unprecedented level and to raise taxes.
Top brackets went as high as 90%. National debt goes from 49 Bill in 1941 to 259
Bill. in 1945.
Fighting in the Pacific
THE RISING SUN IN THE PACIFIC JAPAN’S HIGH TIDE AT MIDWAY AMERICAN LEAPFROGGING TOWARD
TOKYO
Students get this stuff on their own.
The Allied Halting Of Hitler
Battle of North Atlantic German subs were sinking
merchant ships faster than they could be built..
North Africa 9/42 Russia stalls the
German steamroller on the outskirts of Stalingrad High-water mark for Hitler
The North African Second Front Soviets are begging the allies to open
second front. Allies recognize they need to. Stalin’s concerns and fears Allies concerns
Americans are willing to make a cross-channel invasion in 1942 but Churchill and England’s high command are against this.
British argue for an attack at the underbelly of Europe in the Mediterranean.
Operation Torch Invade North Africa 11/42. Ike in command. Biggest sea-born invasion up to that time. American troops get pummeled by Germans in first battle at
Kasserine pass. Patton takes charge. U.S. and Brits begin to drive Germans East. Forced Germans to surrender in Tunisia 5/43
Casablanca
Churchill and Roosevelt Jan. 1943.
Agree to invade Sicily. The plan
Many on American staff don’t like this idea.
Churchill and Roosevelt agree to insist on unconditional surrender of Germany. Why?
Sicily
Sicily invaded and falls 8/43.
Mussolini is deposed soon thereafter and Italy unconditionally surrenders.
Germans don’t leave and carry on fight in Italy
Invasion of Italy 9/43 Allies invade toe of
Italy and start fighting up the boot.
Bogs down; amphibious invasion along the Western coast at Anzio.
Is very slow going in Italy fighting through the mountains.
Allies finally get Rome 2 days before D-Day.
Do not finish in Italy until 5 days before German surrender.
Italy Assessed
Benefits: Does divert some German troops and provides us
with air bases from which we can easily bomb Germany.
Does open the Mediterranean to Allies greatly restricting Germans.
Problems: Delayed the cross-channel invasion by many months,
giving Soviets a chance to get further into Eastern Europe before the war ends.
Increased Soviet suspicion
Tehran Conference
Late Nov. 1943 Purpose First meeting of
Roosevelt and Stalin
Roosevelt attempts to placate Stalin
Eisenhower’s D-day Invasion Of France
Eisenhower is given command of D-day landing.
June 6, 1944. Biggest sea-borne invasion in history.
Land near Normandy.
Five beaches. Gold, Juno, Sword, Utah, Omaha
D-Day
Very hard fighting; Have to break out before Germans
bring in reinforcements and drive invasion back into the ocean. US has Air superiority. US has used paratroopers the night
of the D-day invasion Hitler dithers on the day of the
invasion. August, 1944, invasion of southern
France opens a second front. Patton breaks out and races to the
German border, but is forced to stall when he can’t get enough supplies.
Election of 1944
Election of 1944 comes at a bad time—the war is reaching its climax
Republicans nominate Dewey, popular governor of New York. He is only 42 and is very liberal for a Republican. Platform?
FDR is renominated as a matter of course. Roosevelt is in very poor health. VP, Henry Wallace, dumped and replaced by
Truman. Why? Roosevelt relationship with Truman.
Roosevelt Again
FDR stays in the White House running the war for most of the election.
Dewey position on New Deal Dewey position on war. Dewey is hurt by his VP candidate who
has been a staunch isolationist. FDR wins by 3 Million votes and 432-99 in
the Electoral College. Reasons
Battle of the Bulge
December 1944, Germany was wobbling. Dec. 16, 1944 Hitler unleashes a powerful
all-out counter-offense in the snow-shrouded and foggy Ardennes forest. Battle of the Bulge.
Allies are thrown back in disarray. German target is port of Antwerp. Goal?
Battle of the Bulge
Problem—Germans are very low on fuel and lack air support.
101st Airborne is surrounded but refuses to surrender at Bastogne. Constantly shelled, low
supplies, no winter clothing.
Patton drives north in record time and relieves Bastogne.
V-E Day March 1945 American Troops reach the Rheine April, 1945 just outside Berlin, US forces meet up with Soviets who have
been driving in from the East. Discover the concentration camps. April 12, 1945, Roosevelt dies. Truman, who is totally out of the loop, is hastily sworn in. April 30, 1945, Hitler commits suicide as Berlin is falling around him. May 7, 1945, Germany surrenders unconditionally.
Japan Dies Hard American subs devastate Japan’s
merchant fleet. Massive fire-bomb raids of Japanese
cities. March, 1945, destroy ¼ of Tokyo and killed
over 80,000. As devastating as later Nuclear attacks.
MacArthur recaptures New Guinea.
Leyte Gulf and Philippine
October, 1944, biggest naval battle in history. Leyte Gulf. Japan’s naval power is
destroyed. First Kamikazes.
Jan. 1945, recapture Philippine mainland.
Douglas MacArthur returns to Philippines
Okinawa and Iwo Jima
Spring 1945 vicious battles on Okinawa and Iwo Jima.
Japanese fight to the last man, inflicting severe casualties.
Impact on US strategic thinking?
Atomic Awfulness
Invasion of Japan is assumed will cost America thousands of casualties.
Japan is sending out peace-feelers, but does not appear willing to surrender unconditionally.
Potsdam conference July 1945 Allies agree again to unconditional surrender.
Japan wants to keep the emperor. Manhattan project. Very secret. First atomic bomb in New Mexico July 1945. Nagasaki and Hiroshima—Japanese surrender.
Hiroshima—70,000 instant deaths and 60,000 more over next months due to radiation.
Soviets enter the war just after the first bomb and overrun Manchuria and Korea (hence North Korea)
Japan surrenders August 10, 1945
Why Does Truman Use the Bomb?
Avoid US casualties, but clear Japan would likely surrender before Invasion.
To show Soviets what we have
To prevent Soviets from being involved in Pacific longer and grabbing more territory and having a say in rebuilding of Japan. Probably most important