The War in Europe. The Axis and the “Phony War” The alliance of Germany, Italy (1939) and Japan...

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The War in Europe

Transcript of The War in Europe. The Axis and the “Phony War” The alliance of Germany, Italy (1939) and Japan...

The War in Europe

The Axis and the “Phony War”

• The alliance of Germany, Italy (1939) and Japan (1940) became known as the ________.

• September 1, 1939: The Nazis invade _______and WWII begins– Once war was declared (_______), the _____(France,

Poland, Britain, British Commonwealth of Nations) raced to get __________and prepared for battle.

• The Allies did _____go to the aid of Poland, and German Nazi armies __________Poland in less than a ______by using dive bombers and tanks in a __________(lightning war)

• Allies were quickly stationed along the France/Germany _______________for Germany to make the next move.– Nothing happened for ____________. This period was

known as the “______________.”

Blitzkrieg (“Lightning War”)

• The blitzkrieg was a powerful and ___________ war tactic: surprise attacks with lightning ______

• German _____would crash through enemy lines, while war planes would roar through the skies, _____________the enemy below.

• After Poland and the “phony war” Blitzkrieg turned into high gear.

• The Germans captured __________and ______ (April 1940), _______and the __________(May) and _______(June).

Blitzkrieg

Axis & Allies

• The Axis powers:– Germany– Italy– Japan

• The Allied powers:– Britain– France– Canada– USSR– America– Other

Commonwealth Countries

• World Map with the participants in World War II.– The Allies depicted in green (those in light green entered

after the Attack on Pearl Harbour), – The Axis Powers in orange– Neutral countries in grey.

Evacuation at Dunkirk, 1940

• The Germans pushed through __________and on to France, and surrounded the Allied (mostly British) forces in the French port of _____________.

• Britain was in danger of having to surrender hundreds of thousands of troops, so the _________tried an ____________by sea (________Channel), on May 26th, 1940. – Two days later, the German air force _________the port of

Dunkirk, making the evacuation even more difficult. • Miraculously the British government was able to

evacuate over ______ soldiers to Britain on ____ships in only a _______.– ________victory: saved well-trained British forces

• Unfortunately for the Allies, France was ___________ as a result of the pull out, and on June 22, 1940, France _____________to Germany.

The Battle of Britain (1940-41)

• By ______almost all of ______was in the hands of Germany and Italy. Hitler’s next goal was ___________________: the invasion of ______.

• In an attempt to force the British to surrender, Hitler begins the Battle of Britain. Hitler’s air force (_________) attacks the island of ______, bombing both _______and ________targets

• German planes bombed London and other cities, killing civilians and destroying buildings and streets. These raids became known as “The _________.”

Fighting Back

• The British _______________(RAF), along with many __________pilots, fought back until the German air raids ceased.– British planes outnumbered _____ but had advantage

due to ______: radio waves used to detect squadrons • This battle lasted ________and cost the lives of

__________men, women and children. • It failed in its purpose to demoralize the British

people and had the opposite effect instead the ____became even more _______to the concept of “_____________”

Defending Britain

• The sophisticated British radar system gave them _______warnings of German air raids.

• They used ___________and _________: fighter planes that were extremely effective defence planes.

• In _________, Hitler gave up his plans to invade Britain.– The _____time Hitler was _________a conquest– The failure of Germany to dominate this battle is

known as one of the biggest mistakes in the war which enabled ______to arrive and the British to gain ________.

The War Spreads - 1941

• Shortly after Germany’s defeat in the Battle of Britain, Hitler launched “Operation ____________” (“red beard”), the invasion of the _____(June 22, 1941).

• Even though Germany and the Soviet Union had _______(in 1939) not to invade each other:– Hitler needed to conquer the USSR to _____

his plans of a German _______.– He needed to destroy his ideological rival:

_______________

Operation Barbarossa, 1941• The Soviets were ___________and unprepared for the

attack by ___________German troops• At first, the Germans were able to push the Soviet army

_________and deeper into the Soviet Union. – The _________troops were unprepared for the long and cold

Soviet _____, and soon lost their advantage. – Stalin used the “_______________” policy: they

__________and __________everything so the NAZIS would have nothing to use

• In _____, the German troops launched another offensive in the USSR, and they got as far as ___________. They were once again stopped by the severe winter.

• In early ____, the German army __________, the Soviet army went on the offensive, and took back much of the ______that they had lost.

The Dieppe Raid, August 1942

• By 1942, the ______were making plans to retake _________

• To accomplish this, the Allies launched a series of raids across the ______Channel

• One of these raids was against the _____ town of Dieppe which was in ______hands

• __________troops’ objective: Capture the town at _______under the cover of air ___________and tank __________.

Dieppe: The Problems

• On the morning of ______________, one of the ships carrying Canadian soldiers to Dieppe unexpectedly met a small German __________.

• They engaged in a ________battle, and the noise _______German troops on ______.

• _________caused the ships to land on the beach during _______, and Canadian soldiers were easily ______-gunned by the waiting German soldiers.

Dieppe: The Problems

• Commanders in the boats could not _____what was happening, and communication was ____, so they continued to send _____________onto the beach, who were ________to _______.

• Of ________Canadians who landed: ____ were killed or captured

• More Canadian soldiers ____in those few hours at Dieppe than in _________day of the war

Battle of the Atlantic

• By 1941, the ____________________was in full force.

• Britain was almost completely ___________on Canada and the US’s food and military _______, but the Allied ships bound for England were being ______by German ______ in “________” patrolling the Atlantic.

• To protect these ships, Allies sailed in _______ where ________escorted and protected vessels carrying supplies.– The ___________________provided much protection

with their ___________: small warships

Battle of the Atlantic

• Initially, things weren’t looking good for the Allies in the Battle of the Atlantic, German submarines were sinking Allied convoys at a rapid pace.

• But, by May 1942, the _______had cracked the German ___________, and the Allies could now track German submarines with ________(sound waves bounced off enemy submarines to alert).

• The Allies were now _________ships _____than they were getting ___________.– Beginning of WWII: RCN = 13 ships, 3 000 sailors– End of WWII: RCN = 370 ships, 100 000

sailors

Canadians in the Air

• The Royal Canadian Air Force grew quickly after the war began, and played many ____________roles.

• Canadian Air crews participated in _________raids in Britain, North Africa, Italy, Northwest Europe, Southeast Asia and did night bombings over Germany.

The Tide Turns

• In ____, the Allies gained strength with the ____ declaring war on _______.

• They began to win the Battle of the Atlantic and made important advances in the __________.

• The Allies had cleared the Axis forces out of North _______and now wanted to focus on _________.

The Invasion of Italy

• British PM Winston ________felt that the best way to attack Europe was through _____and ______.– ____________attack

• In 1943, the Allies invaded Sicily, and were successful after ____weeks of fierce fighting.

The Invasion of Italy

The advances were ______, fighting was often _______by _______and it could take weeks to take a city.

Perhaps the most important __________-Axis conflict was __________, where Canadians fought for a month, and lost _______soldiers before the Germans _________.

The Invasion of Italy

• The Allies advance through Italy was _____, but eventually they took ______on June 4th, 1944.

• The fighting continued in Italy until the spring of 1945. – _______1945: ______________and displayed in the

streets of Milan

• Over _________ Canadians were active in Italy during the campaign.

• Significance: required ______________ troops making them ___________for the attack on Normandy

Normandy Landing (D-Day)• __________ was ________________.• “________________” was launched on D-Day, and was

the _________Allied invasion of the war: an attack on Europe across the English Channel.

• The Allies had learnt from their ___________made at ______, and this invasion involved almost one _______ soldiers.– Had been planned for over a ______

• British, American, and Canadian troops stormed ashore along the ______________of the French province of ______________.– Largest ________military operation of WWII: ______

soldiers, ____ships, ____bomber squadrons

Operation Overlord

• There were ___landing points along an 80 km stretch of beach: Sword, Juno, Gold, Omaha, and Utah.

• ___________was the Canadian Objective

Juno Beach and Beyond

• Within ______there were over ____________soldiers on the shores of Normandy– Although the Germans had ___________an attack, they did not

expect the Allies to attempt in such bad ________.• Canadian troops struck at first _____, pouring out of their

landing craft and advancing across the sand up into the town of _____

• The Allies had taken back part of the French soil:– D-day marked the ____________of the ______for Germany

• Canadians continued to fight for _______in order to also take back all the French ports along the English Channel– ________Canadians killed and ____________allied casualties– __________German soldiers killed, wounded or missing

Liberating the _______________

• One of the most ____________moments in the history of World War II for __________Soldiers.

• Canadian troops had been fighting in ________, ____, ______, and in Germany since the D-Day landing.– These troops were moved to the Netherlands to ____

the German troops occupying the northeast back to the ____and to drive German troops in the west back into _________.

• May 5, 1945: Canadian forces drove the NAZIS to retreat from ________and _________

• Important results due to the Canadians’ efforts:– The Dutch people were ______.– Allied troops could continue ______toward Germany

The Final Stages of the War in Europe:

Germany Surrenders

• Germany surrendered on May 7th, 1945.– More details on this next lesson