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World War II: Blitzkrieg, North Africa, and the Eastern Front Theme: Hitler’s Initial Success. Lesson 19. Allied Political Leaders. Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin. Axis Political Leaders. Mussolini and Hitler. Hirohito. Rise of Hitler (Where we left off in Lesson 11).
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World War II:Blitzkrieg, North Africa, and the Eastern FrontTheme: Hitler’s Initial Success Lesson 19
Allied Political Leaders Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin
Axis Political Leaders Mussolini and Hitler Hirohito
Rise of Hitler (Where we left off in Lesson 11) • Treaty of Versailles was very punitive to Germany • Unemployment and other issues created conditions conducive for Hitler to rise to power Dec 21, 1931
Rebirth of Germany • Hitler reinstituted conscription (after France doubled the length of its conscripts’ service) and in March 1936 was strong enough to reoccupy the Rhineland • In June 1934, Hitler purged many of his paramilitary and the SS rose up to replace them
Germany’s Increasingly Militaristic Approach • In Nov 1937, Italy joined Germany in an alliance against the Soviet Union • In Mar 1938, Hitler forced Anschluss (union) with Austria • On Sept 29-30, the British and French foreign ministers attempted to appease Hitler by acquiescing to his demand for the Sudentenland under the understanding Hitler would make no more territorial demands • In March 1939 Hitler seized the western part of Czechoslovakia Neville Chamberlain
Continued Aggression • Britain and France now knew appeasement wouldn’t stop Hitler and they pledged to defend Belgium, Holland, Switzerland, and Poland against German aggression • On Aug 22, 1939, Russia and Germany signed a non-aggression pact • In the event of a German-Polish war, Russia could annex eastern Poland, Latvia, Estonia, and Lithuania • On Sept 1, Hitler invaded Poland
Russia and Finland • On Nov 30, Russia attacked Finland and on Mar 12, 1940, the Finns finally surrendered • Russia’s army did not perform particularly well which made Hitler think the Russians would not be much of a challenge if Germany invaded Finnish infantry passing a destroyed Russian tank
French and German Plans forthe Battle of France 1940 • French anticipated the Germans attacking through the north as they did in World War I so they developed the Dye Plan to counter such an attack • Built the Maginot Line in the south to protect the border
Maginot Line • A line of concrete fortifications, tank obstacles, machine gun posts and other defenses which France constructed along her borders with Germany and Italy • The fortifications did not extend through the Ardennes Forest which was considered “impassable”
Surprise in the Ardennes • On May 12, 1940 Germany attacked through the weakly held Ardennes region • Penetrated Allied defenses at Sedan and Dinant and then began to envelop them
The Panzer's Race To The ChannelBattle of France: May 14-24, 1940
Dunkirk was the last evacuation port available to the Allies.
Moving in for the Kill • German forces pressed the Allied armies trapped in the north, from south and east, into the English Channel. • Meanwhile, German infantry divisions reinforced the southern flank of the German penetration. • But…. Dunkirk Harbor ablaze from German bombing
Halt Order • Hitler halted the German armor • German armor had suffered heavy losses and would be needed to conquer the rest of France • Luftwaffe called upon to finish the job • Luftwaffe proved unable to destroy the British and French • Bases in western Germany were further away from Dunkirk than British planes were from their bases on the British Isles • 340,000 Allied troops were evacuated
Consolidation • On June 16 the French asked for an armistice. • Battle of Britain began. • “Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’” (Winston Churchill)
Italy Joins the Axis • On June 10, 1940, Mussolini declared war on Britain and France and four months later invaded Greece • In many ways Mussolini will hinder rather than help Hitler
Auftragstaktik • German interwar doctrine emphasized: • decentralized, mission-oriented orders (Auftragstaktik) • speed and exploitation of enemy weaknesses maximized by troop commanders taking the initiative (understand commander’s intent) • close integration and cooperation between combat branches (mobile warfare required armor, infantry, and artillery) • leadership from the front
Italian Presence in North Africa • Since before World War II, Italy had been occupying Libya and had over a million soldiers based there • In neighboring Egypt, the British Army had only 36,000 men guarding the Suez Canal and the Arabian oilfields • On Sept 13, 1940, the Italians advanced into Egypt but halted in front of the main British defenses at Mersa Matruh • On Dec 9, the British counterattacked and pushed the Italians back more than 500 miles, inflicting heavy casualties • British troops then moved along the coast and on Jan 22, 1941, they captured the port of Tobruk in Libya
Germany to the Rescue • In the meantime, Germany sent forces across the Mediterranean to Tripoli • The Afrika Corps commanded by Erwin Rommel • Italy’s disasters in North Africa and elsewhere (i.e., Greece) threatened to undermine the Axis position in the Balkans and the Mediterranean
Rommel • Characteristically Rommel attacked and drove the British Commonwealth forces out of Libya except for Tobruk • With the situation in North Africa stabilized, Hitler turned his attention to shoring up Italy, leaving Rommel to deal with North Africa • One of Rommel’s biggest challenges would be his long, tenuous supply line • Between Oct and Nov the Allies sank nearly 80% of Axis supply ships crossing the Mediterranean
Rommel • Rommel pushed the British deep into Egypt but Montgomery stopped Rommel at El Alamein in July 1942
Operation Torch • While this was going on in Egypt and Libya, Americans acquiesced to British pressure and began planning Operation Torch– landings to occupy Algeria and Morocco and co-opt the Vichy French • The “Vichy French” had reached an agreement with the Germans allowing a French government headed by Marshall Henri Pétain to govern the French colonies and those parts of France not occupied by the Germans • The “Free French” established their own government in exile led by Charles de Gaulle
Operation Torch • The Anglo-American forces landed at Casablanca, Oran, and Algiers and then advanced by land and sea to Tunisia
Operation Torch • At first the Vichy French resisted, but eventually surrendered • Hitler began rushing troops to Tunis before the Allies could get there • Hitler was successful in winning “the race to Tunis” and therefore denying the Mediterranean to Allied shipping but he did so at a great price, committing Italian and German troops to an ultimately hopeless fight when they could have been better used elsewhere
Kasserine Pass • By January, Rommel had escaped from Libya and arrived in Tunisia • He developed a plan to sweep up from southern Tunisia and destroy the Allied supply dumps in eastern Algiers • Rommel attacked on February 14 and punched his way through the Kasserine Pass • It was a tactical victory, but Rommel was unable to continue with his larger plan and began withdrawing on Feb 22
Germans Defeated • Rommel then turned south against the British who were arriving from Egypt • British General Bernard Montgomery dealt Rommel a stunning defeat and Rommel personally left Africa • The Axis position in North Africa steadily deteriorated and in early May the Allies controlled Tunisia American soldiers enter Kasserine Pass
First Battle • The Americans did not perform very well in their first combat experience and senior leadership was horrible • General Eisenhower was forced to relieve Lloyd Fredendall of command and replace him with George Patton Lloyd Fredendall, commander of the American II Corps
Results of North Africa • The Germans had wasted valuable resources in an indecisive theater • Mussolini was severely weakened domestically • The Americans learned from their poor performance and made the necessary changes • The British and American coalition weathered a potentially threatening storm
The Eastern Front • On June 22, 1941, Hitler invaded Russia in Operation Barbarossa • The operation encompassed a total troop strength of about 4 million men, making it the biggest single land operation ever • Benefiting from initial surprise, by the end of July Hitler had occupied a portion of Russia twice the size of France • However, by the time the Germans reached the outskirts of Moscow in December, the Russian winter had set in • Remember what we talked about in Lesson 10 about Napoleon’s invasion of Russia
The Eastern Front • In the total four years of fighting on the Eastern Front, an estimated 4 million Axis and 9 million Russians were killed in battle • 20 million Soviet civilians were killed as a result of extermination campaigns against Jews, communists and partisans, casual massacres, reprisal killings, diseases, and (sometimes planned) starvation.
Casablanca Conference • After the Axis surrender in Tunisia, the Allies began planning the next phase of the war • Roosevelt and Churchill met in Casablanca, Morocco in January 1943 • Stalin had been invited, but declined to attend because of Stalingrad
Strategic Differences • US argued for a cross channel invasion to directly attack Germany • Churchill preferred an indirect approach, attacking through the “soft underbelly of Europe” • Reflected the preference for peripheral operations he had shown in World War I
Casablanca ConferenceJan 1943 • Britain • “the control of the Mediterranean meant… control of the Western world.” • Had imperial fortunes in Egypt, the Middle East, and India • Felt it was the Axis’ vulnerable point • Americans • “periphery pecking” would delay the cross-channel invasion that would strike the German jugular
What They Agreed On • Forces from Operation Torch could continue on to Sicily once the North African Campaign was terminated • Churchill knew this would preclude a cross-channel invasion in 1943 • At the end of the conference, Roosevelt announced that “peace can come to the world only by the total elimination of German and Japanese military power . . . (which) means unconditional surrender.”
Next • World War II (continued) • Italy • Normandy