After, I will talk about the battle itself and what happened during. I will tell you about the plans and strategies of each side and finally the outcome. These will all be facts I have gathered and my references will be listed at the end. After the references, I will continue with alternate futures and colorfully change the course of history.…
June 6th of 1944, better known as D-Day, was not the first time the Allies had planned a major large scale invasion against Nazi Germany. The British were considering the possibility of a major Allied invasion across the English Channel in 1942 as well as later on in 1943. However, none of these operations were ever carried out, specifically due to the fact that the Germans were almost always aware of the Allies’ plans. This was not the case during D-Day, though, because the Germans did not know exactly where the Allies would strike. As a result, Adolf Hitler ordered Erwin Rommel to finish the Atlantic Wall, a 2,400-mile fortification of bunkers, landmines, and beach/water obstacles (Levine 43).…
Jeffries, John W. Wartime America: The World War II Home Front Chicago, IL; Ivan R. Dee, Inc., 1996. The home front during the Second World War has often been characterized as a “watershed” and a “good war,” implying that the home front rapidly evolved from the depression era into a mobilized nation for the sake of fighting for the freedom of all people at home and overseas. John W. Jeffries argues that this analysis of the WWII home front history as a “watershed” moment and “good war” is an exaggerated account of what truly took effect in America prior, during, and after the Second World War. Jeffries’ interpretation of the home front and WWII is intriguing and thorough throughout his book. While his argument is vastly unlike the common interpretation of the home front, it is an intricate and…
The populace size and manpower unevenness would not be of a specific significance or a determinant element in a brief period war, however amid a four years ' war it turned into an essential and huge attribute identified with the last result—triumph of the…
Without this recovery, the Axis powers would have overpowered the Allies (as far as industry) and led to a different outcome of the war. Also, the failure of Germans to make rational use of their own industrial capacity and the area they controlled played a huge factor in the Allied victory. Overy also claims that Allied cohesion also helped by means of “getting along” and not having too many internal problems with the alliance. The Axis powers did not get along very well and many disagreements provided turmoil between them. Because the Allied powers had little of this, or so Overy contends, it played a huge role in planning strategies and carrying out tactics on the battlefield, in the air, and on the seas.…
This monograph is categorized into four parts: The Advance, The Trap, The Battle, and The Retreat. These four parts are further broken down into thirteen chapters that further break down and explain…
Allies used machine guns to diminish the Central Powers ' infantry and forestalled Central Powers from advancing onto new territory. Germany created the Schleiffen plan to attack France in the west and quickly shift focus to attack Russia on the east. This significant battle strategy turned out to be a flop. Germany used its wits and intellect to craft a beneficial strategy which helped gain leverage for the first half of the war. On the contrary, the Allies were resilient and resolute and did not give up against the Central Powers.…
WWI waged on for a devastating four years, yet in only six weeks, France succumbed to German attack and plunged society into its next world war. Historians wrestle with explanations, trying to pin-point specific political, psychological and military French failures which were the catalyst for the actual Fall of France. For these researchers, trying to demystify events often resurrects their own personal perspectives on history. Sometimes their bias seeps into their works. None-the-less, Julian Jackson, Marc Bloch and William D. Irvine have all contributed stunning insights into this May-June 1940s period, unraveling nuances for the Fall of France.…
It was widely noted by many that Operation Desert Storm was a defining moment in history due to the extraordinary lopsided results. The reasoning of the…
It is here, Snyder argues, that the vast majority of casualties, approximately 14 million non-combatants between 1933 and 1945, (Snyder 411), in and around the Second World War occurred. The text offers a unique standpoint,…
War is fought between countries, but even in times of conflict between states, civilian affairs must continue. The Allied governmental leaders “who approved it were neither wicked nor cruel, though it may well be that they were too remote from the harsh realities of war” (Vonnegut 187). Unlike the military leaders, the governmental leaders were not present on the battlefield. Without witnessing the reality of war, the Allied leaders could not hope to grasp the true consequences of their actions. They dealt with numbers and spreadsheets rather than physical brutality.…
Before this the Axis powers were on offense conquering and successful, while the allies were on defense just waiting for this long war to end. German soldiers were confident and expecting the invasion on the beaches of France, but they didn’t expect the unending waves of young soldiers that arrived. On this day in which the Allied soldiers finally breached the German lines the war drastically changed for everyone. Germany knew this along with every other Axis and Allied power. “When the breakout occurred in August, there was no holding the Allies back.…
Contrasting World War I versus. World War II History is the past, and it’s important to reflect on the past, to help ensure that as a society we don’t repeat mistakes. At the time of both World War I and World War II, each became the largest war in history up until that point. Each war shared tremendous amounts of death, and the involvement of many countries, so it’s crucial to analyze the causes and the factors of each war to truly see the nature of the circumstances revolving both wars.…
The formulation of Allied World War II strategy was an evolutionary process. It began with Admiral Stark’s “Plan Dog” memorandum providing the early outline for Allied strategy and ended with a unified Anglo-American-Russian plan for victory. British and American leadership discovered the advantages and disadvantages of coalition operations as they struggled to identify a unified grand strategy during numerous meetings during the war. The Germany First strategy that was solidified at the Arcadia Conference ensured Allied survival and the Tehran Conference produced a unified strategy that achieved victory. Britain’s Sun Tzu approach was prevalent early in the war when means were limited and they were the dominate partner.…
The Battle of Britain was a turning point in the war. The Luftwaffe’s inability to hold control of England skies was its first major defeat. Another battle that the Axis could not win was the Invasion of Normandy. One of the primary reasons why the Allies were successful during the Invasion of Normandy was because of deception. Deception to mislead the Germans as to the time, and place of the invasion.…