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The Causes of World War I and World War II
A comparative analysis of the origins of the two World Wars. -- 900 words;

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A discussion of the cause and effects of both World Wars I and II. -- 1,305 words; MLA

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A review of the book "The Reluctant Belligerent: American Entry into World War II" by Robert A. Divine. -- 1,303 words; MLA

World War II
A discussion regarding America's involvement in World War II. -- 831 words; MLA

World War II
An analysis of the outbreak of World War II and the parties involved. -- 1,343 words; MLA

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WORLD WAR II

World War II was one of the deadliest and most destructive wars this world has seen. The
origins of the war were in Germany where Adolf Hitler became the leader and started
ethnic cleansing, killing any Jewish person, gypsy, homosexual or any other person whom
he considered inferior. Another cause of the war was the attempted invasion of Ethiopia
by Italy, which they eventually occupied in 1936 despite British and French opposition.
Germany appeared to be winning the war, taking over the Rhineland, Czechoslovakia,
France, Belgium and other pieces of land, up until 1942 when the tides turned in favor of
the Allies. The Japanese naval airpower was devastated by the Americans and Hitler had
recently been defeated at Moscow. Shortly after Italy was defeated and expelled from the
war and Germany's forces were slowly deteriorated. The war officially ended when the
Japanese surrendered following the detonation of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and
Nagasaki.
Hitler began holding meetings with others who thought like him, blaming Jewish people for
the problems in Europe. The Communists continually tried to break up the meetings of the
group who came to be known as the National Socialist Party in 1923. The National
Socialist Party, led by Goering, Hess, Rosenberg, and Roehm, was outraged with France for
occupying the Ruhr. In 1924 Hitler was sentenced to a four-year prison term for a
demonstration where twenty people were killed. He only ended up serving thirteen months
of the term but it provided sufficient time for him to outline his book Mein Kampf, which
means My Struggle in German. The President of the German State, Marshal Hindenburg, was
eighty-three years old as of 1930 and was persuaded to view Hitler as the next Chancellor
of the Reich. Hitler was called to Berlin by the President and on January thirtieth, 1933
he became the Chancellor of Germany.
Hitler's first acquisition was his reoccupation of the Rhineland, a small portion of
western Germany in 1936. Just three years later German soldiers had already taken over
Czechoslovakia. In early September of the same year Germany took over Poland, France and
Great Britain declare war on Germany, and Norway, Portugal, Spain, and Ireland all
declare neutrality. Later in the year Turkey signs a pact with Britain and France giving
them mutual assistance and the Soviets attack Finland. In April of 1940 the Danish king
announced that Norway was surrendering to Germany and one month later Belgium does the
same. France, under constant attack, gave into Germany in mid June. Italy, sided with
Germany, decides that it needs control of the Suez Canal so it invades Egypt on September
thirteenth. In October after Hitler's constant nagging, Spain joins the war in exchange
for military, agricultural, and territorial demands.
On June twenty-second, 1941 Germany begins Operation Barbarossa, the code name for the
invasion of the U.S.S.R. Hitler's plan was to have his army, 3,200,000 men, split into
three groups; one moving north towards Leningrad, one moving towards Moscow, and one
moving south towards Kiev. By the time his army had taken Kiev it was already September
and as they moved north towards Moscow winter set in early. Hitler's forces were stuck in
the bitter cold of winter. In December a Soviet counter-attack forced the Germans to
withdraw from Moscow. This was the first sign that Hitler's powerful army could in fact
be stopped and that he was bound to make a mistake at some time. Another Allied force,
the British, were also having good luck. In Libya the British were able to split the army
under Rommel, forcing him to retreat.
Early in the morning of December seventh, 1941 a fleet of 189 Japanese aircraft began
attacking Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The first wave of planes destroyed anything it could
find, including American aircraft, battleships, destroyers, cruisers, and submarines. The
second wave followed shortly and attacked everything the first wave had missed.
Anti-aircraft fire was able to deter a third wave, but an incredible amount of damage had
already happened. In only one hour, forty five minutes the Japanese air forces wrecked
and capsized two battleships and three were resting on the bottom. Nineteen war ships had
been hit and 150 aircraft had been disabled. In all over 2,400 American lives were lost,
2,086 from the Navy and 237 from the Army. As a result of the bombing of Pearl Harbor the
United States, with many of the Latin American countries, declared war on Germany, Japan
and Italy. Although many countries declared war against the Axis nations, only the United
States, Brazil, and Mexico actually sent troops to fight.
At this point the war started to turn in favor of the Allies. The first major win for the
American forces was at the Battle of the Coral Sea. After the dust settled at Coral Sea
the Japanese lost three heavy cruisers, two destroyers, and more than twenty other ships.
Just a month later the Americans won another decisive battle at Midway. American forces
spotted the Japanese fleet before it was able to do any extensive damage to the island.
By the end of the battle the Japanese were in full retreat after the loss of four
carriers, two large cruisers, three destroyers, and various other auxiliary craft.
In the U.S.S.R. the Germans had resumed their offensive, now with their primary target as
Caucasus, for the oil, and their secondary target as Stalingrad. The Germans had a chance
to attack Stalingrad while it was nearly defenseless, however they waited and attacked
after Soviet reinforcements arrived. It appeared as though they would capture Caucasus
but a fuel shortage plagued them. In October 1942 the German army had lost twenty-two
divisions and the rest were ordered by Hitler to fight to the last man against the
reinforced Soviets. 22,500 German soldiers under Paulus surrendered inside Caucasus after
losing nearly 200,000, 100,000 dead and 91,000 captured.
The only logical place the Allies could find to attack was Italy, but they first had to
go through Sicily which was guarded by two islands, Pantelleria and Lampedusa. Even
though the attack on Pantelleria destroyed only two of the fifty-four shore batteries,
the Italians flew a white flag when a ship neared the island. The attack on Sicily by the
Allies didn't start well, but they soon got things straightened out and the Seventh army
had gained an important position on the island. On July twenty-fifth Mussolini, the
leader of the Italians, resigned and was immediately imprisoned, only to be freed by
Nazis several weeks later. The Italians surrendered Sicily unconditionally on September
second and their fleet sailed towards Malta. The Eighth army landed on the southern tip
of Italy and moved north, while the Fifth army landed further up the west coast at
Salerno. The Fifth army nearly faced defeat but gained the advantage once heavy armor
arrived. The Fifth and Eighth armies joined forces 45 miles southeast of Salerno and
moved there way to Foggia, then Naples. Shortly after the Italians abandoned Sardinia and
Corsica.
Operations in the Soviet Union continued throughout 1943, with Germany launching their
final offensive in July. The Battle of Kursk followed shortly, proving to be the greatest
tank battle ever. At first the Soviets forced the Germans behind the Dnieper river,
followed by ten German divisions retreating from the Taman Peninsula to Crimea. Kharkov,
Donets, Taganrog, Poltava, and Smolensk were all liberated by the Soviets by mid
September. The Soviets took a short break and resumed their offensive on October seventh.
In order to prepare for a winter offensive the Soviets rested and stockpiled after nearly
defeating Manstein and Kleist.
1944 began well for the Allies, as they invaded and conquered the Marshall Islands in
late January. The attack was split into three groups. The first was a task force who
annihilated the defenses of seven different islands. The second was a group of reinforced
marines who took down the islands of Roi and Namur in only four days of close combat. The
final group landed at Majuro, an island wanted for its deep harbors. However, the island
had already been evacuated by the Japanese and it was taken over without any fighting.
The Japanese air base at Engebi was captured after the loss of 500 Americans' lives. On
February sixteenth the naval base of Truk was raided and 201 enemy planes and
twenty-three ships were destroyed at the cost of seventeen American planes. Less than a
week later 135 planes and eleven surface ships were destroyed at the island of Saipan.
Just a month later American forces captured New Guinea which brought them within 300
miles of the Philippines.
By the spring of 1944 the Soviets reclaimed nearly all of their own country and began
pushing into the Balkans and Poland. The siege at Leningrad was won after two and a half
years. A very important target for the Soviets was the Odessa-Lvov railway. In just two
days they had reached the railhead at Volochisk fifty miles away. General Zhukov, who
also led the mission to disable the railway, took over the German base at Uman which gave
them the crucial position they needed. Zhukov's next move was to disable another rail
line which delivered supplies through Poland to the German forces in the Ukraine. Zhukov,
along with Konev, isolated the German forces in the Ukraine and the area was liberated by
April of 1944. Now the only German troops left in the U.S.S.R were those in Crimea. The
Fourth Ukrainian Front, under General Tolbhukin, defeated the German seventeenth army by
the twelfth of May.
The Normandy invasion, often called D-Day, began on June sixth, 1944 when American,
British, and Canadian forces landed on the Cotentin Peninsula. The objective of the
invasion of Normandy was to regain France which had been taken over by Germany earlier in
the war. The initial attack was spit into three divisions. The first division landed near
Bayeax-Caen and was composed of British and Canadian troops. The second and third
divisions were both American and landed at Omaha Beach and Utah Beach, respectively. In
order for the troops to get across the English Channel a massive convoy of ships was
needed. 5,000 Higgins boats and other small ship-to-shore craft were needed, making the
mission the largest ever on water. 
The British-Canadian offensive, as well as the one at Utah beach, went well and both were
positioned by nightfall. However, the circumstances at Omaha Beach, primarily the
fortified bluffs, proved to be a much tougher fight for the Americans. On the first day
the objectives failed and German forces put up a struggle for the following four days.
The landing forces totaled fourteen divisions from Britain and sixty divisions from
America. Opposing them were fifty German infantry divisions, thirty-six of which were
stationed on the western coast, and ten Panzer divisions. Hitler had been working on a
long range rocket, called the V-1, which he would use against London for the previous
three years and perfected it around the time of the Normandy invasion. Later in the
summer the V-2 was developed which had longer range and harder hitting power. With these
tactical weapons Hitler was able to strike at England from a safe distance and used this
advantage. Britain was bombed 1,100 times and Liege and Antwerp were bombed over 1,600
times.
On June twenty-seventh the first port had fallen to American force after 1,500,000 troops
had landed at Normandy and secured it. The Americans broke through on a road towards a
small, but heavily defended town called Brittany. The Germans fought to the death and it
proved to be the bloodiest battle in the west. By August nineteenth German forces were in
full retreat all along the line and Paris was liberated on August twenty-fifth. The port
of Antwerp was capture on September fourth and Verdun was taken without a fight. Allied
forces continued to deal a beating on Germany but were slowed drastically by gasoline
shortages. 
The Soviet forces broke through the Mannerheim line just four days after the Normandy
invasion and the war between the U.S.S.R and Finland virtually stopped, even though
negotiations didn't happen until later. One hundred Soviet divisions reached the German
front on June twenty-third, followed by the defeat of the German occupied Vitebsk, Orsha,
Mogilev, and Zhlobin. The German Ninth Army was nearly non-existent and the German Fourth
Army was in full retreat. Two different encircling moves by the First Ukrainian Front
forced Romania out of the war on August twenty-fifth. Bulgaria removed itself from the
war the next day. The Axis forces were rapidly losing forces and the war.
Hitler was able to concentrate 250,000 troops to a small area near the U.S. VIII Corps
without foreign intelligence knowing. Early in the morning of December sixteenth, 1944
Hitler's army attacked and brought complete surprise to the Allies, it was known as the
Battle of the Bulge. Hitler himself thought up the plan, but actions by the Allies turned
a nearly devastating onslaught into a stunning victory. Ardennes, Bastogne, and St. Vith
were all very important places during the Battle of the Bulge. At their highest point the
German's came within a few miles of the Meuse River and unknowingly passed by an Ally
supply within a quarter mile. Germany continued to pour troops into the battle which
stabilized by Christmas Eve. When the skies finally cleared the Allies aircraft began
bombing the German armor and trains, which were at a near standstill. Hitler eventually
decided to withdraw from the Ardennes on January twenty-first, but only after losing
120,000 men.
Iwo Jima was an important tactical position in the Pacific War and the Americans were
willing to sacrifice much for it. They sent in 60,000 officers, followed by the Fifth
Fleet. By February twenty-seventh, 1945 the Americans had won over half the island and on
March fifteenth the fighting stopped after nearly 20,000 American casualties. Okinawa was
the last island needed before the direct attack of Japan itself. Okinawa was invaded and
quickly destroyed, followed by the Tenth Army moving towards Japan. It was here that the
kamikaze technique, flying an airplane with a warhead attached to it, against war ships
and other targets. The Tenth Army was the largest amphibious movement in the Pacific War,
comprised of 1,427 ships. Okinawa was readily waiting for the arrival of the Americans on
the south side of the island, with 100,000 soldiers and an intricate system of
fortification in the coral and limestone rock. The Japanese fleet then came out and
intercepted the American fleet.
The Soviets, after rapidly expelling the Germans from their own country, took a little
longer to move into Germany. The Soviets did go full force, sending all four of their
armies into Germany, north and south of Breslau. By mid-February they had already taken
over Bunslau, which is a mere 125 miles from Berlin. Zhukov reached Oder, then Posen
along the Warta River, within sixty miles of Berlin. During February of 1945 the armies
in the west were having trouble making it up the Rhine. The U.S. Third Corps followed the
Germans over the Rhine Bridge after being commanded to Get five divisions across as
quickly as possible. by Eisenhower. The Americans were able to get across the bridge so
quickly that the Germans didn't even have time to demolish it. The U.S. First and Ninth
Armies linked on April first near Paderborn and held the German Army Group B and two
corps of Group H in captivity. After constant air attacks the remaining 325,000 men and
30 general officers surrendered. The Third U.S. Army took Frankfurt, then Kassel. The
Seventh U.S. Army crossed the Rhine near Worms and joined with the Third near Darmstadt.
As a result of this massive movement of Allied forces, the German defense in the west
basically fell apart.
Eisenhower decided to halt many of his troops, knowing that the Soviet forces would be
coming through on the other side, fearful that the two allies might mistake each other
for enemy. The Americans met the Soviets at Torgau on April twenty-fifth. The Soviet army
continued onward toward Berlin and had the city enveloped the same day. Hitler, choosing
not to flee with many of his advisers, committed suicide on April thirtieth, knowing that
there were Soviet forces just above his bunker. The Berlin forces surrendered on May
second. The war on the front next to Italy was surrendered on April twenty-ninth.
Mussolini, the ex-dictator of Italy and his mistress, were killed after attempting to
escape from imprisonment. On May fifth a representative of Doenitz, the inherited leader
of Germany, offered a surrender of all troops in Germany, Netherlands, Denmark, and
Schleswig-Holstein.
Even though the war had ended in Europe, the battle in the Pacific continued. Bombing
Japan seemed to be the most effective way to eat away at the Japanese forces. On July
sixteenth, 1945 news that the nuclear bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico, was a success was
rushed to President Truman. Even though the bomb was originally intended for Berlin,
Truman decided that the weapons could also be used to force a quick surrender in the
Pacific. On July twenty-sixth America joined Britain and China in issuing an ultimatum
for unconditional surrender. On August sixth, after Japan ignored the ultimatum, a B-29
bomber appeared over Hiroshima and then sped away. A few moments later the first atomic
bomb to be dropped on humans detonated, killing and injuring about half the city's
population, 320,000 people. Three days later a second atomic bomb was dropped on
Nagasaki. The second bomb did less damage, killing and injuring 80,000 people because the
bomb was off target. On August tenth the Japanese declared that they would accept the
terms of the Potsdam ultimatum. The second world war was officially over on September
second, aboard the Missouri where the Japanese signed a document ending all fighting.

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