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More than 75 years after its end, World War II remains one of the most devastating and impactful events in human history. It was a global war, and the nations that fought it employed every available resource, harnessing both technology and people to one purpose. Today, we remember WWII for its battles, tragedies, and horrors, but also for its outcome: a greater good that triumphed over evil.
The breadth of World War II facts and history can be overwhelming, which is why World War II For Dummies is the perfect book for any reader, from history buffs to WWII novices. Full of accurate and easy-to-understand information (so you don’t have to speak military to comprehend), this book will help you explore a war that defined and shaped the world we live in today. You’ll discover all the players—individuals as well as nations—who participated in the war and the politics that drove them. Battle by battle, you’ll find out how the Axis powers initially took control of the war and how the Allies fought back to win the day. World War II for Dummies also covers:
Become an expert on this historical catalyst with World War II For Dummies—grab your copy today.
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World War II For Dummies®
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Cover
Introduction: The Most Destructive War
About This Book
Conventions Used in This Book
How This Book Is Organized
Icons Used in This Book
Where to Go from Here
Beyond the Book
Part 1: Origins and Causes of the War, 1919–1939
Chapter 1: World War II: Why It Matters and What You Need to Know
The War’s Beginnings
Who’s Who of Combatants
The Course of the War
Where in the World Was the World War Fought?
The Effect of World War II
Chapter 2: The Great War and the Uneasy Peace: How World War II Happened
The End of One War and the Roots of Another
Collapsing Economies: The Great Depression
Fascism and Nazism: Whose Bright Idea Was This?
The Rise of Hitler
Japan and the Militarists: The Army Calls the Shots
Chapter 3: Hoping for Peace: The Rise of the Dictators, 1933–1939
The Steps to War: Taking Advantage of Circumstances
Getting Aggressive: Italy Makes a War
Forging a Pact: The Axis Is Born
The Spanish Civil War: Fascism and Communism Clash
Germany: Using Diplomacy and Smoke Screens for War
Britain: Seeking Mediation and Appeasement
Austria and Czechoslovakia Catch Hitler’s Eye
Part 2: Starting the War: The Axis Invades and Conquers, 1939–1942
Chapter 4: Invading Eastern Europe: Hitler’s Power Grows, 1939
Czechoslovakia Disappears: Divvying Land and German Occupation
Playing Both Sides of the Fence: Negotiations with the Soviets
Talking Peace and Planning War: Hitler Finds an Excuse
Chapter 5: Blitzkrieg in Europe: World War II Begins, 1939–1941
The Invasion of Poland
Drawing the Line: Britain and France Declare War on Germany
Fighting His Own War: Stalin Goes after Finland
He’s B-a-a-ck: Hitler Strikes Norway and Denmark
The Phony War: Using France to Get at Britain
A British Epic: The Battle of Britain
The Balkans: Mussolini’s Mess and Hitler’s New Target
The Italians Take Their Lumps All Over Africa
Chapter 6: The Ultimate Battle: Hitler versus Stalin
If at First You Don’t Succeed, Find Another Target
Appeasing Germany: Stalin Is Clueless
Forgetting What’s Important: Hitler’s Fatal Decision
Corporal Hitler Takes Charge of the Eastern Front
Chapter 7: America on the Sidelines: 1933–1941
Looking Inward: A New President and a Neutral Stance
Bad Signs in Europe
Roosevelt Plays the Neutrality Game
France’s Fall: America’s Wake-up Call
Chapter 8: Collision in Asia: Japan and America, 1937–1941
A Brief History of Politics in Japan
Building the Perfect Machine: Japan Thinks War
War Comes to America: Pearl Harbor
The Japanese Wage War
Ignoring the Writing on the Wall: MacArthur Fights
Hitler Declares War on the Mongrel Race
Now It’s a World War
Part 3: Behind Enemy Lines: Nations at War
Chapter 9: Maintaining Resources: The Axis
Nazi Germany
Unready and Unwilling: Fascist Italy
Believing in Victory: Imperial Japan
Chapter 10: Working Together: The Allies
Staying United: The United Kingdom
Working Hard: The United States
The Soviet Union
Chapter 11: The War against the Jews
The Rationale: Nazi Thinking
The Persecution Begins: Jews in Germany
Mobile Killing Units: The Einsatzgruppen
Deportation to Ghettos, Concentration Camps, and Death Camps
The Final Solution and Its Ultimate Failure
Part 4: Planning and Launching the Allied Counterattack, 1942–1943
Chapter 12: The Politics of Compromise, 1942
The Axis Powers: Deals among Desperados
American-British Cooperation: Not a Bed of Roses
Clashing Strategies: A Debate among Friends
Making the First Decision: Germany First
Chapter 13: Taking North Africa, Sicily, and the Boot
Rommel’s Desert Defeat: El Alamein
Throwing the Torch: The Allies Strike in North Africa
Turning toward Tunisia
A Day and Night in Casablanca: The Allies Go-Forward Plan
Operation HUSKY: Invading Sicily
Up the Boot: Invading the Italian Mainland
Chapter 14: Germany a Three-Time Loser: In Russia, At Home, and in the Atlantic
Hitler’s 1942 Offensive in Russia
Amassing Ammo and Men at Kursk
Taking It to the Streets: Bombing Germany
High Tide of the U-Boat: The Battle of the Atlantic
Chapter 15: Guadalcanal, New Guinea, and Midway: Japan’s Three Strikes
The Rope-a-Dope: Japan Fights for Time
A Military First: The Battle of the Coral Sea
Midway: Naval Aviation’s Finest Moment
New Guinea: Green Hell
Protecting Australia: Allied Pacific Strategy
Nimitz Takes the Offensive
Chapter 16: Planning for the Rest of the War, 1943
The Big Three: Conference at Teheran
Winds of Change in 1943: From the Axis Perspective
The Panorama of 1943: From the Allied Perspective
Part 5: The Long Haul, 1944
Chapter 17: The Italian Campaign and Soviet Victories in the East
Changing Plans: End Run on the Winter Line
Rome: The First Capital to Fall — So What?
Steamrolling the German Army in Russia
Chapter 18: Liberating Europe: From Normandy to Paris, and Beyond
Deciding on Strategy: OVERLORD
D-Day: Invasion and Breakout
Expanding the Beachhead
Too Far, Too Fast: More Decisions
The Air War: Wearing Germany Down
Hitler’s Gamble: The Battle of the Bulge
The Soviets on Germany’s Doorstep
Advancing into Yugoslavia and Hungary
Chapter 19: Japan Begins to Crack
The Island Assault Plan: The Marshalls and Then the Marianas
Marshall Islands: Learned Lessons Well Applied
Mauling the Marianas
The Japanese Navy Weighs In: The Battle of the Philippine Sea
Kicking Off the New Guinea Campaign
Controlling the sea: Biak
Same old mistakes: Peleliu
Preparing to Take Leyte
MacArthur returns
Operations in the Pacific: An Appreciation
The China-Burma-India Theater
Allied Hit and Runs in Burma
The Japanese Tip the Balance in China
Stirring Up Trouble: The Japanese Offensive against India
The End of the Line in Burma: Good-bye to Stilwell and the Japanese
Part 6: Starting Over: The War’s Aftereffects, 1945
Chapter 20: Ending the War (Almost): The Final Offensive
The Allies Cross the Rhine, the Germans Turn a Corner
The Soviets Move Forward
Fighting in the Air and at Sea: The Final Acts
Capturing German Territory
Roosevelt’s Last Act and Stalin’s Coup at Yalta
The War in Italy Ends, and Germany Succumbs
Stalin Moves on Berlin
No Way Out: The Germans Surrender
Celebrating VE Day
Reconstructing a New Germany: The Potsdam Conference
Loose Ends of a Bitter Victory
Chapter 21: The Japanese Defeat
Returning to the Philippines
Attack from Air and Sea: Japan Is Next
The Fight for Iwo Jima
Okinawa: A Different Set of Problems
The Planned Invasion of Japan
The Atomic Bomb and the Defeat of Japan
The Allied Occupation of Japan
Chapter 22: The Uneasy Peace
The Costs: A Global Assessment
Remaking the World: War and Technology
Giving Peace a Chance: The United Nations
A New World Emerges
The Beginnings of the Cold War
Some Final Thoughts
Part 7: The Part of Tens
Chapter 23: Ten Formidable Military Leaders of World War II
Winston S. Churchill: Timeless Excellence
Dwight D. Eisenhower: Don’t Worry, Be Happy
Douglas MacArthur: Damn the Torpedoes!
George C. Marshall: Sterling Dedication
Chester W. Nimitz: Master of the Sea
George S. Patton: A Warrior for All Seasons
Irwin Rommel: The Desert Fox
Franklin D. Roosevelt: Artful Dodger
Isoroku Yamamoto: Samurai Warrior
Georgi Zhukov: Leading the Masses
Chapter 24: Ten Weapons That Made a Difference
The German MG-42 Machine Gun
The German Tiger Tank
The M-1 Garand Rifle
The V-2 Rocket
The P-51 Mustang
The Me-262 Jet Aircraft
The B-17 Bomber: The Flying Fortress
The 88 mm Gun
The Yorktown and Essex Class Carriers
The Atomic Bomb
Chapter 25: Ten “ What Ifs? ” of World War II
What If Hitler Conquered Great Britain Instead of Attacking the Soviet Union?
What If U.S. Carriers Had Been at Pearl Harbor?
What If Hitler Pursued Proper Strategic Programs?
What If There Had Been No Attack on Pearl Harbor Until 1942?
What If Hitler Liberated the Russians?
What If France Held Out in 1940?
What If the Bulge Had Worked?
What If Hitler Had Been Assassinated?
What If Hitler Let His Generals Plan Strategy?
What If the Japanese Navy Had Survived?
Index
About the Author
Connect with Dummies
End User License Agreement
Chapter 2
FIGURE 2-1: Europe, 1914.
FIGURE 2-2: Mao Tse-tung.
FIGURE 2-3: Europe after the Treaty of Versailles, 1919.
FIGURE 2-4: Benito Mussolini, known as
Il Duce
(the leader).
FIGURE 2-5: Adolf Hitler, known as
Der Führer.
FIGURE 2-6: Josef Goebbels.
FIGURE 2-7: Hermann Goering.
FIGURE 2-8: Heinrich Himmler.
Chapter 3
FIGURE 3-1: British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain proclaims, “Peace in our...
Chapter 4
FIGURE 4-1: German aggression in Europe.
FIGURE 4-2: Josef Stalin, Soviet Union.
Chapter 5
FIGURE 5-1: The fall of Poland.
FIGURE 5-2: Winston Churchill.
FIGURE 5-3: France falls to Germany, 1940.
FIGURE 5-4: General Charles de Gaulle.
FIGURE 5-5: German- Italian operations in the eastern Mediterranean, 1941.
FIGURE 5-6: Field Marshal Erwin Rommel.
Chapter 6
FIGURE 6-1: Germany attacks the USSR, 1941.
Chapter 7
FIGURE 7-1: Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Chapter 8
FIGURE 8-1: Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.
FIGURE 8-2: Japanese conquests in the Far East, 1941–1942.
FIGURE 8-3: Allied General Douglas MacArthur.
Chapter 13
FIGURE 13-1: Field Marshal General Bernard Montgomery.
FIGURE 13-2: General Dwight Eisenhower.
FIGURE 13-3: General George Patton.
FIGURE 13-4: The Allied invasion of Italy, 1943.
Chapter 14
FIGURE 14-1: German summer offensive, 1942.
FIGURE 14-2: The B-17 Flying Fortress.
FIGURE 14-3: The Battle of the Atlantic.
Chapter 15
FIGURE 15-1: Operations in the Pacific, 1942.
FIGURE 15-2: Admiral Chester Nimitz.
FIGURE 15-3: New Guinea and Guadalcanal offensives, 1942.
Chapter 17
FIGURE 17-1: The Soviet attack on Germany, 1944.
Chapter 18
FIGURE 18-1: The D-Day landings, June 6, 1944.
FIGURE 18-2: The Battle of the Bulge, December 1944 through January 1945.
Chapter 19
FIGURE 19-1: Operations in the Pacific, 1944–1945.
FIGURE 19-2: The Battle of Leyte Gulf, October 1944.
FIGURE 19-3: The campaign in Burma and India, 1944–1945.
Chapter 20
FIGURE 20-1: The Allied advance into Germany.
FIGURE 20-2: Soviet Advance into Germany, 1945.
FIGURE 20-3: Germany Divided, 1945.
Chapter 21
FIGURE 21-1: Liberation of the Philippines.
FIGURE 21-2: The Battle of Iwo Jima.
FIGURE 21-3: The Battle of Okinawa.
FIGURE 21-4: The Planned Attack on Japan and the Soviet Invasion of Occupied Ch...
Chapter 22
FIGURE 22-1: Europe, 1945.
Cover
Table of Contents
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The Second World War (1939–1945) was the most destructive event in history. It was total war covering the entire globe, and the nations that fought it employed every available resource, harnessing both technology and people to one purpose. The farmer and factory worker became just as important to the war effort as the soldier in the field. Aerial attack allowed cities and civilians to become legitimate targets of war. Because of its destructiveness and global scale, the human and material costs of the war were almost immeasurable. The war ended with the development of two new technologies that heavily influenced the course of the postwar world: atomic power and the ballistic missile.
Mass murder of noncombatants and prisoners of war occurred — tens of thousands of defenseless Russians, Poles, and Chinese died at the hands of their enemies. A state-run genocide killed 12 million people, including 6 million Jews. The war also cost millions of lives, resulting from battle as well as non-battle deaths. The Soviet Union lost 28 million people; Germany, nearly 5 million people. Japan lost about 5 million people; China, about 10 million. Great Britain and the Commonwealth lost nearly a half million people. France and Italy both lost over 400,000 combat deaths. The United States, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia each suffered 290,000 combat deaths. Poland, Hungary, Belgium, the Netherlands, Norway, Bulgaria, Romania, and the Philippines suffered significant military and civilian losses as well. The physical destruction of most of the continent of Europe and several Asian nations left an indelible mark.
Undoubtedly, the war has cast a long shadow over recent history. The way that nations form strategy, wage war, make peace, and negotiate treaties is still shaped by the memories and lessons of the Second World War. For better or worse, a new world emerged from the ashes of the old, and we live in the shadow of this most terrible and destructive war. The world has been sensitized to the dangers of ethnic hatred and its accompanying acts of organized killing. The ever changing nature of United States–Chinese relations has its roots in the conditions in China after the war. The creation of Israel by the world community was a direct result of the Jewish Holocaust. The need for collective defense in the form of alliances like the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) became the primary guarantor of peace in Europe. The United Nations was created to correct the failure of the League of Nations to oversee international norms of behavior. Traditional enemies became partners against a greater threat, and the role of government expanded to meet the burden of greater defense requirements. Nations were willing to take action to guarantee their interests to prevent another catastrophe like World War II.
But the memories of World War II are rapidly fading. Those who lived during this momentous period in twentieth century history will no longer be among us to provide witness to the past. The national World War II monument and local memorials, along with such films as Saving Private Ryan, will preserve some understanding of the virtue and sacrifice of the soldiers and civilians who ensured the survival of freedom in the world. The preservation of freedom in World War II became the ultimate weapon in the victory over tyranny in the Cold War. The end of the Cold War itself may be considered the final act in the drama initiated in the Second World War. The people of the Allied nations, through great sacrifice, guaranteed that freedom would be preserved in the face of forces that threatened the existence of civilization. This protection is undoubtedly their greatest bequest to the modern world.
Like all great stories, World War II has its unforgettable villains and heroes. Things are clearly drawn in terms of good and evil. And though often tragic, the story of World War II is nevertheless dynamic, colorful, and exciting. The dedication and courage of the soldier, sailor, marine, or airman in battle and the resilience and sacrifice of those on the home front still stirs the blood. Military professionals all over the world still study the tactics, strategy, and campaigns of the war.
World War II is a universal story, one that may leave you believing that these people were exceptionally heroic because they underwent such a traumatic experience and somehow managed to get on with their lives. For the most part, these people were quite ordinary, but because they were able to rise to extraordinary efforts, they have earned a measure of immortality. If you compare yourself to those who experienced the Second World War, you may find out a bit about who you are.
The literature of World War II is large and continues to grow every year. World War II For Dummies meets the needs of the reader who wants to be informed without being overwhelmed with details. This book is directed toward several types of readers. First, the person who desires accurate, easily accessible information about the major events and issues of World War II without encountering intimidating historical narrative or ponderous military interpretation. Second, the person who may want a refresher on the major events of the war, but does not want to struggle through the tomes of scholars or the arcane minutiae of military buffs. Third, the person who is looking for a different way to approach history and find out more about the war to enhance his or her appreciation and understanding of an event that has directly or indirectly shaped his or her life. To most people, the past appears remote and inaccessible. The main message of this book is that history is neither remote nor inaccessible! Politics, passions, and conflict (both armed and ideological) have always made up the good stuff of history. Thus, history in the proper context can connect you to the past and allow you to discover similarities to events in your own era.
History doesn’t have to be boring or intimidating. Everyone who hates history books says that they are nothing more than dry lists of names, places, dates, and jargon. That’s true enough, in most cases, if you only look that far. Although this is a different kind of history book, it does follow certain conventions found in most history books. For example, this book is arranged chronologically, and it tells a story. There’s a beginning, a middle, and an end. What is different about this book is that you can start wherever you want. You don’t need to slog through the whole thing from beginning to end to figure out what is going on. You have maximum flexibility to pick and choose what you want to know. You can jump in at any point and still keep up with the story, or you can select a topic to read in a chapter that interests you.
As you move through this book, you encounter key terms. Wherever necessary, I define italicized terms for you, or I reference terms elsewhere with a detailed explanation. I also provide maps that can help you figure out the whys and hows of this global war.
Not surprisingly, World War II has many dimensions and complexities and therefore, many interesting topics and trivia that are part and parcel of discussions about the war. I include some of these facts in gray boxes called sidebars. If you want to dig into the weeds, these boxes are for you. If you are not interested in such detail, these boxes can be easily passed by with no effect on your overall understanding.
This book covers a span of about 26 years, from 1919 to 1945. This period seems short, but these years defined and shaped the future. To help you break down the years of the war, I’ve organized this book into seven parts, each dealing with a major period of the war. And the chapters within the parts take you through the major events of World War II, highlighting important facts and points of interest. Each chapter acquaints you with words and ideas that are important to the entire picture.
Every year, someone discovers another cause of the Second World War. Interpretations abound and continue to grow in breadth and imagination. However creative these interpretations may be, almost everyone agrees on several salient points related to the causes of the war. This book focuses on these basic causes.
This part takes you from the peace settlement that ended World War I to the opening of the war in Europe — Germany’s invasion of Poland. You can examine the time between the wars to get an overview of world events that led to the rise of totalitarian dictators who threatened peace in Europe and in Asia. You also examine the role the United States and the Soviet Union played during this period. This part tells you about the series of tensions, crises, and decisions that eventually led the to the outbreak of the Second World War.
The chapters introduce you to the leaders and the various political systems that existed at this time, as well as the foreign policies of the major states. You get acquainted with the interests and ambitions (and mistakes) that drove the key events that finally led nations to war. You can take a look at the strategies and military preparedness of the nations involved to help understand why and where the war began.
This part looks at the stunning victories of the Axis powers — Germany, Japan, and Italy — and how they nearly won the war in one rapid blow. You can see how Germany was able to defeat its enemies and dominate the European continent so quickly, leaving a weakened Great Britain as the last remaining opponent. Japan, at war with China since 1937, became the dominant power in Asia. You can also examine Japanese strategy and the reasons for Japan’s surprise attacks against Great Britain and the United States in the Pacific. This part also explains why and how Germany initiated its own surprise attack on the Soviet Union and then declared war on the United States.
These chapters give you details about the most important campaigns in Europe: Poland, Norway, France, and the Battle of Britain. In addition, you find descriptions of Japanese operations in China and the attacks on Pearl Harbor, Singapore, the Philippines, and Wake Island in 1941–1942. You also find out about the first year of the greatest land war in history — the invasion of the Soviet Union.
This part addresses the contributions of the people who did not carry a weapon on the front lines but played a role that was just as important in waging war. All the resources of the nations were put to task to sustain the war effort. Because their contributions were so critical to victory, they also became targets of bombers seeking to destroy both industrial production capability and the morale of the citizens. Although each nation at war had to accomplish the same goals to conduct total war, each nation approached the total mobilization of its resources quite differently.
The chapters examine government policies and practices that centralized the war effort. You can observe the Allied nations individually to appreciate both the common and unique approaches to war production. On the Axis side, I address the story of German and Japanese slave labor efforts as well as the attempts to overcome shortages and limitations. Even as the war progressed, changes occurred in the societies engaged in war. You can find out how these changes affected the future of women and other people in these societies.
This part looks at the strange bedfellows created by the war, especially among the Allies. At first, America and Great Britain formed an uneasy alliance. These democracies had to find common cause with Joseph Stalin’s communist dictatorship. Basic and all-important strategic decisions had to be made, and scarce critical military resources had to be properly allocated to fight wars in Asia and in Europe. You also see how the Allies cooperated to strike several blows at the Axis during these critical years. These hits include the all-important Battles of Guadalcanal, the Coral Sea, and Midway in the Pacific; the North African and Italian campaigns and the epic defense of Stalingrad in Europe.
These chapters examine the numerous options the Allies had in conducting the war and how important the survival the Soviet Union was to eventual victory. You can look at the Allied campaigns and key battles against the Axis in 1942 and why these victories spelled eventual defeat for the enemy. You can also get the lowdown on the Axis leaders’ key mistakes, which helped seal their fate. The last chapter again provides you with an overall strategic assessment for 1942.
This part is an overview of the brutal and bitter campaigns to recapture territory occupied by the Axis. In the Pacific, this meant jungle fighting and amphibious assaults on heavily fortified islands. In Europe, this meant a cross-channel invasion of the continent and a simultaneous struggle against tough German defenses in Italy. The Russo-German War reached a climax, and the Germans were driven out of the Soviet Union. Italy was knocked out of the war and surrendered to the Allies.
Hitler’s final offensive in the West began in 1944, even as the Eastern front crumbled. While stationed in the Pacific, the Allies pushed the Japanese even closer to their home defenses. The Allies took other actions against the Japanese in far away places like the Aleutian Islands and Burma. Americans invaded the Philippines while the American navy ended the last Japanese naval threat. Although any hope of victory was fading, Germany and Japan continued to fight on, even as their homelands were subjected to increasingly destructive bombing raids against their cities and industries.
These chapters provide overviews of the strategy that led to the campaigns in the Pacific and in Europe, and they also examine the more famous Battles of the Bulge, Kursk, Leyte, the Philippine Sea, and Leyte Gulf, as well as the terrible Battles of Tarawa, Saipan, and Peleliu. The last chapter looks again at the Allied leaders in conference and at how the strategic picture looked from the point of view of each nation involved in the war.
This part outlines the last months of fighting that destroyed the Third Reich and the Japanese empire. The giant hammer blows of the Allied armies against the last of the German defenses left Germany devastated and its leader dead in the rubble of Berlin. American and Soviet troops met at the Elbe River, and Americans mourned the loss of their own Commander in Chief. Soviet armies drove deep into Eastern Europe, while American and British forces advanced into Czechoslovakia and Austria. By May, the war was over, and victory in Europe was declared.
The war against Japan appeared to be never ending. Some of the greatest and costliest battles of the war were fought at Okinawa and Iwo Jima. Despite the mounting odds against them, the Japanese refused to surrender. The plans were set for the invasion of the Japanese main islands. This most devastating war ended with the employment of the most devastating weapon ever developed. The atomic bombs that fell on two Japanese cities finally brought the war to an end and opened an uncertain new era in world history.
This is a standard concluding chapter in the … For Dummies books that provides the author with a place to put neat things he hadn’t already said in the text. These purely arbitrary lists of ten things are intended to stir up a bit of discussion, debate, and appreciation for some different factors involved in World War II.
Sometimes, you may quickly need some help in finding out what’s important. In this book, you find icons — little pictures next to the text that get your attention and point you to the information you want. Look for these icons throughout the book. Here’s what each one means:
This icon gives you a piece of historic information that can add to your understanding or appreciation of a particular event in World War II.
This icon highlights information related to the Allies.
This icon highlights information related to the Axis.
This icon points out especially important information that you need to keep in mind as subsequent events unfold.
This icon points out the technical and strategic aspects in the book, such as how many weapons were used, how they were used, and the nuts and bolts of the offensives.
This book is about war and politics. In most cases, wars are hard to understand unless you look into the political issues that led to conflict. If you have questions about how World War II started, you should start at the beginning of the book. If you are looking for specific campaigns, you can look at background information, move right into the battles, or look for tidbits in The Part of Tens. You can even skip around, switching from one part of the globe to another and come back to other parts of the story later on. Any way you choose to go, you can find what you need to fill in the gaps.
In addition to what you’re reading right now, this book comes with a free access-anywhere Cheat Sheet. To get this Cheat Sheet, go to www.dummies.com and search for “World War II For Dummies” by using the Search box.
Part 1
IN THIS PART …
Find out what the world was like during this period.
Understand how the world moved into yet another world war in just twenty years.
See how the aftermath of World War I led to the rise of totalitarian dictatorships bent on revenge.
Get an idea of how democracies failed to provide solutions to complex social and economic problems.
Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
What led to the war
The major players
The battlegrounds
A very brief chronology
World War II is over. It’s been over since August 1945. Good guys won. Bad guys lost. What else do you need to know? First you need to know that nothing — and especially not war — is ever that simple. World War II — its causes, its battles, its tragedies, and its victories — is almost beyond comprehension.
Want to see what true evil is? Study the German concentration and death camps or think about the 6 million Jewish men, women, and children who were murdered. Want a glimpse of heroism? Look at the stoicism the British displayed when London was bombed for 42 nights straight or remember the ordinary soldiers from any nation who fought against overwhelming odds toward what seemed to be inevitable defeat. Want to understand sacrifice? Consider the 25 million dead from the Soviet Union alone or the resistance fighters who gave up everything to free their countries from Nazism. Want to understand power, fanaticism, devotion to duty, political maneuvering, selflessness, selfishness, and persevering in the face of unimaginable terror? Look at events that led up to and the events that occurred during World War II.
And when you get past all that stuff, think about how World War II has affected the world we live in today: national borders, political loyalties, strategic and military alliances, international trouble spots, the beginning and end of the Cold War, the birth and death of superpowers, the role of peacekeeping forces, and more — in short, our ways of life and how we conduct ourselves as nations — all have been largely shaped by events that happened 80 years ago.
That’s why World War II is important.
Officially, World War II began when Nazi Germany invaded Poland in September 1939 and the French and English declared war against Germany as a result of that invasion. But the war’s beginnings came long before this invasion. World War II was the product of a lot of things coming together in just the wrong way at just the wrong time.
When the Great War ended, the winners (Britain, France, the United States, and Italy) wanted the losers (Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the Ottoman Empire) to pay. Because the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires no longer existed, that left Germany to bear the brunt of the victors’ vindictive peace agreement. Humiliated and broke, Germany began nursing a big-time grudge. The victors themselves weren’t even happy with the outcome. Some (Italy) felt cheated; some (France) felt that Germany hadn’t been punished enough, and some (the U.S.) just wanted the heck out of Dodge.
In addition, the peace agreement created new nations (Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia) in Eastern Europe from the wrecked Austro-Hungarian Empire and other pieces of land from here (Germany) and there (the Soviet Union). Think that didn’t tick everybody off?
All the nations experienced financial troubles following World War I. The European nations (especially Germany, with the war debt hanging over its head) were practically destitute. Slowly, each made an economic recovery — just in time for the world economy to spiral downward. The U.S. stock market crashed in 1929, and the economies in Europe tanked pretty soon after that. Weakened by the war, no European nation was able to stop the economic downturn. And many saw the ruined economy as an indication that capitalism and democracy had failed.
With the world in such a mess, folks looked toward their governments to solve their problems, and those countries without a strong tradition of democratic rule were susceptible to promises made by future tyrants who claimed that by consolidating power in one party and one man, they could provide stability and order.
As a result, in Germany specifically (and in Italy earlier), the fledgling democracies gave way to dictatorships and eventual totalitarian rule (that is, all aspects of life are controlled by the dictator). In Italy, this dictator was Benito Mussolini; in Germany, it was Adolf Hitler.
Fascism is a political ideology in which the state is exalted above all else. All effort and resources are committed to glorifying the state. Individual freedom doesn’t exist; there is only the freedom to serve the state. Fascists believe that people reach their potential only through service to their nation. If the nation is great, the people are great. And the best representation of the nation’s greatness is through war. Italy was Fascist, as was Spain after the Spanish Civil War (see Chapter 3).
Nazism is Fascism with a significant difference: the race issue. The Nazis believed that race is the fundamental trait and therefore the defining characteristic of a people. Just as dogs are genetically predisposed to certain roles (some hunt and others herd, for example), each race is genetically predisposed to certain roles. Some are leaders; other races (the “inferior” ones) are meant to be mastered. The Aryan race is, according to Nazis, the Master Race. Then, in descending order are non-Aryan Caucasians, Asians, Africans, and finally Jews. The Jewish people occupied a special place at the bottom of the Nazi racial hierarchy for the following reasons:
They “corrupted” the other inferior races and the weak minded of the Master Race with what Hitler thought of as Jewish ideas: equality among people and individual freedom.
They wanted to take over the world and thus posed a specific threat to the Master Race who, as the Master Race, deserved to rule the world.
They were “parasites” who betrayed Germany during World War I.
There have always been tyrants and people who abused power, and in many ways, Hitler was no different than any other dictator. He consolidated power by eliminating anyone who could oppose him. He targeted and abused groups he didn’t like. He used propaganda as a tool to lull the German people into believing that what he told them was true.
In other ways, Hitler was different. He had the power of an industrialized nation behind him. He had the capability to export his policies all over Europe through diplomatic trickery and lies and then through war. He had the certainty of his fanatical vision of a Jew-free Europe. And, maybe most frightening of all, he had the ability to make the German people as a whole believe that by following him down the path to hell, they were fulfilling their destiny for greatness.
The British and French, having just been through one horrific world war (although they didn’t call it that at the time) were willing to do just about anything to make sure that they didn’t find themselves in another horrific war. For both countries, this determination to avoid conflict resulted in their policy of appeasement. By giving in to the demands of aggressors, such as Hitler, they hoped to avert another crisis that would lead to war. Obviously, this strategy didn’t work.
The United States, separated from Europe by an ocean, wanted to remain separated from Europe. Like the French and British, the Americans had seen enough of war. They learned as much about European politics and intrigue and blood feuds as they wanted to during the Great War, and they had no intention now of allowing themselves to get mixed up in that mess again. So they developed an isolationist policy and naively insisted that what went on in Europe — or anywhere else in the world, for that matter — was not their concern.
Japan, long a key player in Asia, wanted to consolidate its power there. Japan still held the German bases that it had occupied in China during World War I, and as one of the victors, Japan got to keep large sections of Chinese territory that had once been controlled by the Germans, in addition to being given control of islands that had belonged to Germany. Japan also sought to increase its holdings in China, which, in addition to being a problem for the Chinese, was also a problem for the United States, who had interests there, too.
Americans may find this hard to believe, but U.S. soldiers weren’t the only ones fighting the Nazis and the Japanese. (In fact, they weren’t even the first ones to fight the Nazis). A whole lot of other people from a whole lot of other places fought on one side or the other.
On the Allied side (the side that fought against Germany and Japan) were the following nations:
Great Britain
United States
France — and after the fall of France to the Germans, Free French, led by Charles de Gaulle)
Soviet Union
Italy (after 1943)
Canada
Australia
China
New Zealand
India
South Africa
Others, including resistance fighters from the German-occupied nations, such as Poland, France, Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Czechoslovakia. Nations from South America also joined in the Allied cause
On the Axis side (the side that fought to dominate Europe and Asia) were the following:
Germany
Italy (before 1943)
Japan
Other nations sympathetic to or occupied by Germany or that felt particularly threatened by the Soviet Union, such as Bulgaria, Hungary, Finland, and Romania
Here is a very brief rundown of the highlights of World War II. For more information about these events, head to the appropriate chapter:
On September 1, 1939, Germany invaded Poland. On September 3, Britain and France (and other nations) declared war on Germany.
On September 17, 1939, the Soviet Union invaded Poland, having struck a secret deal with the Nazis regarding Poland’s fate.
On March 18, 1940, Italy joined the war on Germany’s side.
In May through June 1940, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France fell to the Germans, and the Battle of Britain began.
In March 1941, the U.S., still isolationist, implemented its lend-lease policy, which enabled America to lend supplies, including war supplies, to the Allies.
In June 1941, Hitler turned on Stalin, and Germany invaded the Soviet Union, at which point Stalin saw the light and joined with the Allies to declare war on Germany.
On December 7, 1941, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and the United States entered the war. Shortly after that, Germany and Italy declared war on the U.S.
In 1942, Japanese troops captured numerous Pacific islands and places in Asia, including the Philippines, Singapore, Burma, and Malaya. America struck back with limited success but stemmed the Japanese advance permanently at Guadalcanal and New Guinea. The pivotal naval battle of Midway also took place that year.
Also in 1942, the fighting in North Africa began in earnest. The Germans were defeated at Stalingrad — the decisive land battle of World War II. British forces defeated German and Italian forces at the decisive Battle of El Alamein. The Allies began their advance against Germany with an invasion of North Africa.
In 1943, the tide of the war swung in the Allies’ favor. The Soviet troops began to drive Germany from the USSR, the German troops in North Africa surrendered, and the U.S. made progress against the Japanese in the Pacific, capturing key island strongholds and outflanking the Japanese defenses in New Guinea.
The Allied invasion of Normandy (D-Day) on June 6, 1944, marked the beginning of the end for Nazi Germany. Germany’s last-ditch effort (the Battle of the Bulge in December of 1944) failed to stop the Allied advance into Germany.
By early 1945, the U.S. made significant progress in the Pacific. Despite the difficulty of the task, U.S. forces managed to conquer the Philippines.
In Europe, by April 1945, Germany had lost the war. Hitler committed suicide on April 30, and on May 7, Germany surrendered unconditionally.
By mid-summer of 1945, U.S. soldiers had broken the Japanese Navy and captured Okinawa and Iwo Jima in the Pacific in preparation for an invasion of the Japanese Home Islands.
On August 6, the U.S. dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima; on August 8, it dropped the second atomic bomb on Nagasaki.
On August 14, 1945, Japan surrendered.
“World War” was not just a grandiose name for what happened between September 1939 and August 1945. It literally was a world war. In fact, if you were to stick a pin in a spinning globe, chances are you’d end up stuck in some place that was in some way connected to the war. Maybe it was a supply station or a battleground, or maybe it just had an airfield that pilots could land on en route to or from somewhere else.
World War II affected every country in Europe. Most of the nations were directly involved in the war (Germany, France, Italy, Poland, Luxembourg, Czechoslovakia, to name a few). Other places tried like heck to stay out of it — think Switzerland (which was successful in remaining neutral) or Belgium (which wasn’t).
Given the state of the Soviet military in 1940 and Hitler’s arrogance in thinking that the German army was unbeatable, it’s no wonder that he thought Germany could do what no army has yet been able to do: Beat the Russians in their own snowy, cold, forbidding back yard.
When Germany invaded the Soviet Union, Hitler figured five months was all it would take for the superior German army to bring the Soviet bear to its knees. He was wrong, and the Germans ended up in Russia through two Russian winters. It was a different war, one that meant the complete destruction of either Nazism or Communism.
North Africa was another major battleground. It was important for a couple of reasons and saw two of the most respected generals in the war (Montgomery for the British and Rommel for the Germans) battle it out there:
The Allies needed to protect access to the Suez Canal, without which they would be unable to supply their troops.
Capturing North Africa would enable the Allies to launch an attack across the Mediterranean into Italy.
The battles in the Pacific and Southeast Asia were brutal. The terrain was a nightmare. Thick jungles, rocky cliffs, deep ravines, and networks of caves posed obvious disadvantages for those who had the unpleasant job of attacking a position. Not only was the terrain difficult to fight on, but the rains, when they came, were unrelenting. Add to this the presence of a determined foe who would rather die than surrender, and you have a miserable and deadly situation. Taking the Pacific islands often meant yard-by-yard advances in hand-to-hand combat. The battles in Southeast Asia were little better.
The Battle of the Atlantic centered on protecting the essential movement of men and supplies to Britain and the Soviet Union from German U-boats (submarines). Initially, the terror of the seas, the U-boats used what was called the wolf-pack tactic: If a German submarine spotted a convoy, it radioed its location and tracked the ships while waiting for other U-boats to assemble. Usually under the cover of darkness, the U-boats attacked the most vulnerable ships — in the same way that a pack of wolves pursues its prey and kills the weakest.
It wasn’t until 1943, when the Allies were able to produce more ships than the U-boats could sink and sink more U-boats than the Germans could build, did the U-boats stop being a threat in the Atlantic.
World War II changed the world. It created and destroyed nations, and it shifted the balance of world power and influence from Europe to the Soviet Union and the United States. It ushered in the atomic age and opened a new war — the Cold War — in which a former partner became a mortal enemy. Although World War II ended the global threat of Nazism, it didn’t end hatred or eliminate genocide as a tool for war (think “ethnic cleansing”). The Second World War also brought colonialism to an end, and it created new states with all kinds of problems that are prevalent every day in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.
World War II was one of those rare instances in history where the threat was obvious. The enemy was well defined and allowed a clear distinction between good and evil. Nations bound together to face a common threat; these nations would not have found common cause otherwise. Think of the democracies joining with Josef Stalin, the Soviet dictator of the same ilk as Hitler. Many thought that in the end, there would be a new world, a more peaceful world, but the result is that we live every day with the aftershocks of World War II.
Chapter 2
IN THIS CHAPTER
Winning a hollow victory
Growing problems in the aftermath of the Great War
Looking at the world of the 1920s
Figuring out what happened in Italy and Germany
Examining the Great Depression
Understanding Fascism and Nazism
Looking at Japan’s involvement
World War II didn’t just happen. Italy didn’t start flirting with restoring the Roman Empire in 1935 for no reason at all. Germany didn’t wake up in the spring of 1936 and say, “Hey. Master Race. World domination. Sounds good.” In fact, by the second half of the 1920s, things looked pretty stable — at least compared to what they looked like just 10 years earlier when the Great War had just ended. What happened to the world that had supposedly been made safe for democracy?
If you want to understand how and why World War II started, you have to look at the how World War I (also called the Great War) ended and the crucial years that followed it. You also need to understand the impact that the Great Depression had on the world economy and how these conditions compelled democratic nations (such as Italy and Germany) to turn to totalitarian principles to solve their problems.
Finally, you have to know what was going on with the other nations — Great Britain, France, and the U.S. — to understand why they didn’t act quicker to stop the threat that today, at least, seemed obvious.
The Great War (World War I) started in 1914. On one side were Great Britain, France, Imperial Russia (Russia before the revolution that got rid of the Tsar and put the Communists in power), and Italy (which entered later). On the other side were Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire (see Figure 2-1).
Although the war supposedly started because of the assassination of Franz Ferdinand (the heir to the Austrian throne), these nations really fought to determine status and power in the world. Each alliance wanted to establish its position as the dominant colonial or military power.
Not long into the war, a stalemate developed along a line of entrenched defensive positions stretching from the North Sea, through Belgium and France, to the Swiss border. Neither side could get the upper hand. After three years of what came to be called trench warfare (where one side lobbed highly explosive shells, poison gas, and so on into the trenches of the other side, and then attacked with waves of infantrymen), the result was that hundreds of thousands of soldiers were needlessly slaughtered.
In 1917, Russia, embroiled in a revolution at home, left the war, and the United States entered the war on the side of Britain and France. The U.S. became involved partly in response to Germany’s harassment of American ships and the sinking of the Lusitania by a German submarine, and partly in an idealistic crusade “to make the world safe for democracy” — the words that President Woodrow Wilson used in his war message to Congress. Shortly after the Americans entered the war, the conflict finally ended. The Allies — America, Britain, France, and Italy — had won.
By the time the war ended (November 11, 1918), it had gone on for four agonizing years. It used poison gas, submarines, and airplanes. It destroyed empires, created new states based on national or ethnic identity, saw a new communist revolutionary state in Russia, and put the United States in a position to control the agenda that would shape the postwar world. Over 10 million soldiers and civilians died in the war. Europe — the dominant economic, political, and cultural force in the world — had exhausted all its material and human resources.
FIGURE 2-1: Europe, 1914.
The peace conference opened in January 1919. The only important attendees were the four nations on the winning side: Italy, France, Great Britain, and the United States. (Russia, which had left the war in 1917, was in the midst of a civil war and was not represented.) The nations that lost were not invited because the winners didn’t think their presence was necessary. The terms of the peace would be dictated to them.
Woodrow Wilson, the U.S. President, wanted to build a world that would allow nations to live in peace with one another. His ideas were embodied in his famous Fourteen Points,
