WW2 Allies - United States of America
They came late to the ballgame by British standards, but they came to play. They were crude, crass and lacking in military finesse according to
Montgomery and other Allied leaders, but they won many more times than they lost. They fought down there in the mud and the blood and the gore and got
the job done.
America Enters the War
Americans joined the Allies to defeat Axis militarism and nationalist expansion. After Japanese air forces attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the
United States entered a global war that had been raging for nearly two years. Sixteen million Americans donned uniforms. The millions more who stayed
home comprised a vast civilian army, mobilized by the government to support the war effort. At 7:55 AM on 7 December 1941, the quiet of a Sunday morning
was shattered by the drone of low-flying planes, then thundering explosions and strafing gunfire, and then wailing sirens and antiaircraft fire. Nearly
200 Japanese bombers, torpedo planes, dive-bombers, and fighters swarmed over Hawaii's Oahu Island, pummeling U.S. ships and aircraft. An hour later a
second wave attacked. By 10 AM, eighteen ships were listing or sunk in the oil-slicked, burning waters of Pearl Harbor; more than 300 aircraft were
destroyed or damaged; nearly 2,500 Americans were dead and more than 1,000 were wounded.
On December 8, President Franklin Roosevelt asked Congress to declare war on Japan. Congress did so, and the president signed the declaration of war
the same day. On December 11, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy declared war on the United States. For Americans, the global war that had been raging for
two years was just beginning.
Mobilizing for War
"We are all in it - all the way," President Franklin Roosevelt told Americans during a radio broadcast two days after the United States entered the war. "Every single man, woman and child is a partner in the most tremendous undertaking of our American history." Sixteen million donned uniforms. The millions more who stayed home were a vast civilian army, mobilized by the government to finance the war effort, conserve natural resources, and produce a continuous flow of war material.
When the United States entered the war in 1941, American defense industries were already churning out planes and ships, trucks and tanks, guns and shells, and supplies and equipment. Tons of goods were being shipped to Britain and other nations battling Axis advances. As America joined the fight and battlefronts multiplied around the globe, demands on war production skyrocketed. Civilian industries retooled, making tanks instead of cars, parachutes instead of stockings, even machine guns instead of Kleenex®. And as men went off to war, six million women took their places on factory floors and assembly lines. The sheer mass-and seemingly endless supply-of American-produced war matériel would overwhelm the Axis enemies.
Shortages
As natural resources, even agricultural outputs, were diverted to support the troops, Americans faced shortages and rationing. In 1942, the U.S. government began rationing gasoline and sugar. The next year, fresh meat, butter, cheese, and canned goods were rationed as well. Every month, households received a limited number of ration stamps with point values for fresh and canned foods. Stamps had to be redeemed with each food purchase. Shoppers could exchange meat drippings and bacon fat - used for explosives - for extra points. Even with rationing, foods were in short supply. Many families tended backyard "victory gardens," canned their own vegetables, or substituted ingredients in favorite recipes.
American Internment Camps
Fearful of threats to homeland security, President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942. His order authorized the removal of "any or all persons" from areas of the country deemed vulnerable to attack or sabotage. Nearly 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans - two-thirds of them U.S. citizens - were forced from their businesses and homes. Most had only several days' notice before they were relocated. They were held in internment camps in isolated locations for up to four years. Approximately 11,000 German nationals and 1,600 Italian nationals were arrested, with many interned.
A Star in the Window
Reviving a practice started during World War I, millions of U.S. families - one in five - displayed blue-star flags in the front windows of their homes. Each star proclaimed a son or daughter in military service. Many families displayed more than one flag or a flag with multiple stars. Each star symbolized a family's love, pride, worry, and hope. If a loved one was killed, a gold star covered or took the place of the blue one, making known an individual's sacrifice and a family's loss. Service flags reminded passersby of the enormity and human cost of the war effort.
"You're in the Army Now"
Responding to Uncle Sam?s call, American men, most in their early twenties, hung up their civvies, put on a uniform, and went to war. Nearly sixteen million Americans served in the U.S. Army, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard, and Army Air Forces.
The United States summoned millions of American men - rich and poor, illiterate and educated, from farms and cities - for "training and service" in U.S. land, naval, and air forces. Many joined; most were drafted. They found themselves at one of hundreds of mobilization camps and training centers across the country. They received a haircut, immunizations, a stack of uniforms and gear, a bunk, a footlocker?and a rude awakening. Most had just weeks to learn soldiering, the technicalities of weapon systems, or the complexities of support services. Then they faced the realities of war.
Battle of the Atlantic
Tons of American-produced supplies and war matériel, as well as hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops, had only one way to get to Europe: in ships crossing the North Atlantic. German submarines, or U-boats, posed a constant threat to Allied vessels, even ships in U.S. coastal waters; by war's end, more than 2,500 would be sunk. But the deployment of ships in convoys, as well as ever-improving detection technologies and anti-sub weaponry, ensured that thousands of tankers, merchant ships, and troop transports made safe, albeit nerve-wracking, crossings. Allied counterattacks ultimately destroyed most of the U-boat fleet.
Because lone ships at sea were highly vulnerable to attacks by prowling German U-boats, the Allies began to dispatch supply and troop ships in groups. At first, several ships were accompanied by a single destroyer. Soon dozens of vessels, sometimes more than 100, were sailing together with multiple warships. Airplanes acted as spotters, first flying in patrols above coastal waters and later launched from escort ships. Convoys transported everything needed to wage war: an "iron mountain" of weapons, ammunition, equipment, supplies, planes, and vehicles, and tens of thousands of troops.
"Damn the Torpedoes!"
Even when traveling in protected convoys, the U.S. merchant fleet of tankers, freighters, transports, tugs, barges, and newly built Liberty ships was vulnerable to attack by "wolf packs" of German U-boats. A torpedoed vessel hit midships in the engine room could sink in less than a minute. Often it caught fire or exploded first, and ships transporting fuel oil or munitions were especially vulnerable. One in twenty-six U.S. mariners died during the war, a rate higher than that of any of the other services. Those who survived the sinkings returned to sea again and again.
The Mediterranean Theater
Campaign in North Africa
In 1941, President Franklin Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill were becoming personal allies. They agreed to destroy Germany first, then Japan. With Germany battling Russia, U.S. war planners wanted to open a second front in German-occupied France. But Roosevelt deferred to Churchill: the Allies would first attack in the Mediterranean, the "soft underbelly" of Nazi-occupied Europe. In 1942, untested U.S. troops joined the British, who had been battling Italian and German advances in North Africa for two years. Supported by hundreds of warships and support vessels, plus bombers and fighters, Allied troops put ashore along Africa's northern coast. Then they pushed east to join the fight against Axis strongholds in Tunisia. Allied air, naval, and ground forces, initially outmatched and often stopped, gradually isolated the Axis army. Months of brutal fighting ended in the war's first Allied victory, and taught green U.S. troops and commanders hard truths about real combat.
Italian Cul-de-Sac
Roosevelt and Churchill agreed that Italy promised the best approach to Nazi Europe. In July 1943, half-a-million Allied soldiers, sailors, and airmen were deployed in a massive amphibious assault against German and Italian forces on Sicily, a rocky island just south of Italy's "boot."
British and American commanders, often at odds and fiercely competitive, struggled to coordinate operations. U.S. Lieutenant General George S. Patton was determined to best British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery. In what Patton considered 'a horse race in which the prestige of the U.S. Army is at stake,' he raced up the island's west side. Patton reached Messina, Sicily's northernmost port, before Montgomery - just after Axis troops had escaped.
Lightly resisted landings in Italy in September belied the bloody struggle that lay ahead. It took nine months for Allied forces to claw their way to Rome, and they never reached Germany. By the end of the war, Allied casualties in Italy topped 300,000.
Storming Fortress Europe
American war planners had long wanted to make a direct assault on northwest Europe, but the British had refused. Roosevelt deferred to Churchill, and neither heeded appeals from Joseph Stalin, who was battling Nazi expansion eastward into Russia, to open a second front in the west. But in spring 1943, the British relented. The Allies agreed to launch an assault across the English Channel into France.
In the summer of 1943, the U.S. Army Air Corps expanded daylight bombing runs against industrial targets in Germany and occupied Europe. Squadrons of bombers flew hundreds of miles, far beyond the range of available fighter escorts, to attack oil fields, refineries, and factories. Dozens of planes and their crews were lost. In early 1944, finally accompanied by protective escorts, bombers struck aircraft plants and rail networks.
By the spring of 1944, a year of Allied bombing had weakened Germany's war machine. The Allies finally were ready to strike directly at the heart of Nazi-occupied Europe.
D-day
On the choppy waters of the English Channel, nearly 7,000 Allied navy and merchant vessels pushed toward the beaches of Normandy. Overhead, 12,000 bombers and fighter planes poured inland. Soldiers loaded with gear were crowded into open landing craft, tired, cold, stiff, soaked in sea spray. Many were seasick. Wave after wave of troops waded ashore, some in neck-deep water. They were met by withering fire from concrete pillboxes atop high bluffs. Left and right, soldiers fell, blown to bits. Survivors clawed their way forward, securing an Allied foothold in France.
Fighting for France
After D day, the Allies poured two million troops and tons of supplies, equipment, and munitions into France. Allied troops and armored divisions under the overall command of U.S. General Dwight D. Eisenhower spread inland from the beach and air-drop zones in Normandy. They stormed enemy positions, traded fire across fields, and tramped along winding roads that were often littered with shattered wagons, abandoned bicycles, burned-out trucks and tanks, and the bloated bodies of enemy dead. In towns, many with bombed-out buildings and rubble-filled streets, they advanced door-to-door in close-quarters fighting, always alert for sniper fire. During the three-month advance, 37,000 Allied infantry were killed.
Meanwhile Allied bombing and strafing battered German defenses. In August, amphibious landings from the Mediterranean poured troops and supplies diverted from Italy into southern France.
On August 29, 1944, U.S. infantrymen marched down the streets of Paris. They were greeted with cheers and kisses as residents celebrated the city's liberation from German occupation. France had fallen to the Nazis in 1940, but an internal resistance movement had struggled to sabotage occupying forces and overthrow the German-backed Vichy government. By late summer of 1944, as Allied troops neared the city, freedom fighters took to the streets and Allied commanders dispatched a French armored division to the city. In days, the commander of German forces in Paris surrendered. By mid-September, the Allies were in control of Belgium and stood ready to strike Germany.
Battle of the Bulge
On December 16, 1944, Allied troops were massed along miles of the German border when the Nazis mounted a surprise offensive in the forests of Belgium. The Allied line bulged, but did not break. A month of bitter fighting in winter cold and deep snow cost the Allies nearly 80,000 casualties; some 20,000 Americans were killed. The battle further depleted Germany's disappearing resources and fighting forces; its army by now was deploying boys, many younger than sixteen. But the Germans' desperate resolve hardened, setting the stage for a bloody battle for Berlin and the German homeland.
On Towards Berlin
In early spring of 1945, Allied infantry and armored divisions, in concert with a massive, merciless bombing campaign, pushed toward Berlin from both west and east. Millions of Allied troops advanced across Germany, breaking through German defenses and taking thousands of prisoners of war.
Along the way, they freed Allied prisoners of war from prison camps. During the war nearly 94,000 Americans, about 200,000 Britons, and 5,700,000 Soviets were taken prisoners of war by Nazi Germany. While English and American captives were sometimes mistreated, Slavs, considered racially inferior by the Germans, were routinely brutalized, starved, left to die of disease, or executed.
Allied forces also liberated concentration and death camps where Nazis had killed six million Jews and five million more "undesirables": Gypsies, disabled persons, homosexuals. Inside the camps, troops found piles of gaunt dead bodies, and some emaciated survivors.
In the first week of May, following Adolph Hitler's suicide on April 30, the Nazi regime collapsed. Berlin fell to the Soviets, and Axis armies in Italy gave up. On May 7, 1945, Germany surrendered, and the war for Europe was over.
The Pacific Theater
Midway
While fires still roiled out of control at Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces attacked more targets in the Pacific. Over the next three weeks, they swept across eastern Asia nearly to Australia, and invaded the Philippines. Because the Allies had agreed to give highest priority to defeating Germany and Italy, resources for combating Japan were limited. Still, the Allies began fighting back.
On April 18, 1942, Lieutenant Colonel Jimmy Doolittle led sixteen B-25 bombers, launched from an aircraft carrier more than 600 miles out to sea, on a daring raid on Tokyo. Most of his planes hit targets in the capital. Although the raid caused modest damage, it embarrassed the Japanese government and greatly boosted U.S. morale.
In June 1942, the Japanese attacked the Midway Islands as a step toward taking Hawaii. But U.S. forces, having broken Japanese codes, lay in wait for their enemy. When the two fleets clashed, the Japanese seemed to be winning, easily destroying two waves of U.S. attack planes. Then a few U.S. dive bombers caught the Japanese carriers with planes refueling and sank three of them. Another was damaged and later sank. Although the United States also lost a carrier, it was easily replaced by U.S. industry. The Japanese never fully recovered.
Across the Pacific
In 1943, the U.S. Army and Navy jointly began a two-pronged attack through the central Pacific and across New Guinea to the Philippines.
In the central Pacific, vast ocean areas separated critical island bases. Fast carrier task forces and army bombers attacked the targeted islands while slower amphibious forces made bloody assaults on island strongholds. Once captured, the islands became airfields and supply hubs for the next attack.
In the south, Allied forces continued west around Rabaul, bound for the Philippines, supported by the Army Air Forces and, at times, the central Pacific Fleet. Island assaults began with massive bombardments from ships and aircraft against shore positions. Forces landed in specially designed landing craft, many of which could move up on the beach itself before unloading. Once on the beach, the men fought their way inland, attacking enemy troops spread out in caves, bunkers, and fortified heights, often suffering heavy losses. Their weapons included not only mortars, rifles, and machine guns, but also fearsome flamethrowers.
In October 1944, General Douglas MacArthur returned to the Philippines (he was forced to evacuate in March 1942) and began pushing back the Japanese. The Japanese islands of Iwo Jima and Okinawa fell in March and June of 1945.
The Final Blows
In March 1945, U.S. Army Air Forces intensified their strategic bombing campaign over Japan. Instead of flying high-altitude daylight runs against industrial targets, they began low-flying nighttime attacks on cities, with incendiary bombs. Firestorms devastated property and killed hundreds of thousands of civilians. On the night of March 910, for example, U.S. bombers destroyed sixteen square miles of Tokyo and killed close to 100,000 men, women, and children. By mid-June, most of Japan's major cities were gutted. Aerial mines were dropped in harbors while the U.S. Navy launched carrier air attacks against coastal targets. Still the Japanese fought on. An invasion of Japan appeared inevitable.
In July 1945, President Truman made his controversial decision to use atomic weapons that had been developed secretly during the war by Manhattan Project scientists. More than one million troops were moving to invade Japan when the first bomb destroyed Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. On August 9, a second atomic bomb leveled Nagasaki, and Japan surrendered.
As the war in the Pacific drew to a close, Allied troops liberated American and European civilians who had been interned by the Japanese in occupied Asian countries. Among the internees were nearly 14,000 U.S. businessmen, missionaries, and teachers and their families. Held captive from Manchuria to Indochina, they endured deplorable conditions, and often cruel treatment at the hands of guards. By the time they were rescued, starvation rations had reduced many of them to living skeletons who had to be carried to safety.
Victory
The Allies celebrated the collapse of Germany and victory in Europe on V-E day, May 8, 1945. Across Britain, Europe, and the United States, jubilant crowds took to the streets, their elation?and relief, tempered by the knowledge that war still raged in the Pacific. But the celebrating was unrestrained on August 15, 1945, when Japan admitted defeat. "This is the day we have been waiting for since Pearl Harbor," said President Harry Truman. "This is the day when Fascism finally dies." Surrender documents were signed on September 2 in a ceremony aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay.
Peace
Peace was won, but an uncertain future lay ahead. Although the American economy was booming and the nation?s spirits were high, eight years of war had left cities worldwide in ruin, economies in shambles, and civilian populations displaced and ripe for unrest. The United States championed the establishment of the United Nations (chartered in June, 1945), daring to hope that it would keep world peace and safeguard U.S. economic and political interests worldwide.
Even as tensions with the Soviet Union surfaced, American forces were rapidly demobilized and millions of GIs returned home. Veterans sought a return to normal life. The GI Bill made it possible for all returning veterans to achieve the American dream of owning a home of their own. Educational subsidies and job-finding aid helped many veterans increase their earning and spending power. And more than four million no-down-payment, low-interest mortgages helped them finance the purchase of a new house (costing about $8,000). The GI Bill fueled an unprecedented growth of America's middle class and contributed to the phenomenal spread of suburbs nationwide.
References & Resources
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Sources and Other Reading
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Retrieved July 12, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_the_United_Kingdom_during_World_War_IIGilbert, Martin. The Second World War: A Complete History. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1991.
Keegan, John. The Second World War. New York: Penguin Books, 1990.