wor ld TwHE DEFINaITIVEr VISUAL hIistoIry 0U0S1__0H0a1l_ftHitlael.fiTnidtlde . i n1dd 1 2241//1101//0088 1155::1508::3335 0U0S2_-000023-_0T0it3le_.Tinitdled. in d2d 2 251//1111//0088 1126::4027::4076 wor ld TwHE DEFINaITIV Er V ISUA L hIistoIry from blitzkrieg to the atom bomb 0U0S2_-000023-_0T0it3le_.Tinitdled. in d3d 3 251//1111//0088 1126::4037::1096 CONTENTS LONDON, NEW YORK, MELBOURNE, 1 MUNICH,AND DELHI Japan on the March 32 Japan’s desire to be considered a world power. Growing militarism and invasion of Manchuria. DORLINGKINDERSLEY Senior Art Editor Senior Editor Rise of the Axis 34 Gadi Farfour Alison Sturgeon Hitler and Mussolini flex their military muscle in the Rhineland and Abyssinia and form a Designers Project Editors powerful new pact. Amy Orsborne, Priya Kukadia, Ferdie McDonald, Sam Atkinson, THE SEEDS Elizabeth O’Neill, Dean Morris Tarda Davison-Aitkins Weakness of the Democracies 36 Managing Art Editor Managing Editor OF WAR The Great Depression. Attitudes of France, Karen Self Debra Wolter Britain, and the US to the threat of fascism. Cartographers Picture Researcher 1914–1938 Encompass Graphics Ltd, Brighton, UK; Sarah Smithies 10 The Spanish Civil War 38 Iorwerth Watkins; David Roberts Fascists and Socialists rehearse the greater Production Controller Production Editor Introduction 12 conflict to come. Louise Daly Maria Elia Timeline 14 Japan invades China 40 Art Director Reference Publisher The start of the Sino-Japanese War in 1937. Bryn Walls Jonathan Metcalf The War to End War 16 Japanese conquests. Associate Publisher The Great War, the bloody stalemate of trench Liz Wheeler warfare, the Russian revolutions of 1917, the Appeasing Hitler 42 entry of the United States into the war. German rearmament and annexations: Austria and Sudetenland. France and Britain unable TOUCAN BOOKSLTD The Flawed Peace 18 to prevent Hitler’s territorial demands. Senior Designer Managing Editor Versailles and the other peace treaties. War Thomas Keenes Ellen Dupont reparations. The founding of the League of 2 Nations. The United States refuses to join. Designers Senior Editor Nick Avery, Phil Fitzgerald, Alice Peebles Fascism and Nazism 20 Leah Germann, Mark Scribbens New nationalist political doctrines designed to Additional Text Editors combat the spread of communism. Donald Sommerville Natasha Kahn, Anna Southgate Editorial Assistants (cid:79)BENITOMUSSOLINI 22 Abigail Keen, Tom Pocklington Hitler Takes Power 24 EUROPE GOES First American Edition, 2009 Germany’s failure to create a workable democracy. The effects of the Depression. TO WAR Published in the United States by Hitler’s rise and establishment of dictatorship. DK Publishing 1939 375 Hudson Street The Nazi State 26 44 New York, New York 10014 The Nazi ideology is established in Germany, with propaganda and anti-Jewish legislation Introduction 46 A Penguin Company playing an important role. Timeline 48 Copyright © 2009 Dorling Kindersley Limited (cid:79)THE BERLIN OLYMPICS 28 08 09 10 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 The Path to War 50 Civil Wars in China 30 Europe prepares for war. Germany marches The wars that developed into a long, drawn-out into Czechoslovakia. The secret Molotov- struggle between Nationalists and Communists. Ribbentrop Pact between USSR and Germany. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright owner. Published in Great Britain by Dorling Kindersley Limited. A catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN: 978-0-7566-4278-5 DK books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk for sales promotions, premiums, fund-raising, or educational use. For details, contact: DK Publishing Special Markets, 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014 or [email protected]. Printed and bound by Star Standard in Singapore See our complete catalogue at www.dk.com 0U0S4_-000047-_0C0o7n_tCeonnt.tinedndt. in d4d 4 244//1121//0088 1069::1416::4225 4 (cid:79)RIFLES 52 Blitzkrieg 76 The War in the Desert 124 The German invasion of the Netherlands, Failure of Italian invasion of Egypt. Germans Declarations of War 54 Belgium, and France. Success of the under Rommel arrive to reinforce Italian army. Hitler’s invasion of Poland is followed by Wehrmacht’s fast-moving mechanized Advances and retreats across Libya. declarations of war by Britain and France. divisions backed by close air support. (cid:79)MEDICINE IN THE FIELD 126 (cid:79)ADOLF HITLER 56 Dunkirk 78 British Expeditionary Force trapped at Dunkirk. (cid:79)ERWIN ROMMEL 128 Poland Destroyed 58 British and French troops evacuated by the THE WIDENING Despite their protests, Britain and France can do Royal Navy and flotilla of small craft. Conflicts in the MiddleEast 130 nothing to save Poland from Hitler and Stalin. WAR Invasion of Syria and Lebanon. The importance (cid:79)THE EVACUATION OF DUNKIRK 80 of Middle Eastern oilfields. War in Iraq. The Phoney War 60 1941 Occupation of Iran. Situation in Palestine. France and Britain await Hitler’s next move. TheFall of France 82 100 The situation on the home front. The conquest of France. Germans enter Paris. The Balkans Invaded 132 French agree to an armistice. Formation of the Introduction 102 Rapid German conquest of the Balkans. EarlySkirmishes 62 Vichy government under Pétain. British withdrawal from Crete. Minor action on the Western Front. British Timeline 104 bombing of German ports. Actions at sea. The Battle of Britain 84 Operation Barbarossa 134 Battle for control of the skies over Britain as Life under the Swastika 106 Surprise German invasion of the Soviet The Winter War 64 Hitler plans to invade. The importance of Life in France, the Netherlands, and other Union begins with a series of stunning victories. USSR invades Finland. Despite early defeats, the radar. The invasion is called off. conquered states. Hardships. Collaboration Soviets eventually make small territorial gains. and resistance. The treatment of Jews. (cid:79)SIEGE OF LENINGRAD 136 (cid:79)WINSTON CHURCHILL 86 (cid:79)JOSEPHSTALIN 66 (cid:79)LIFE UNDER GERMAN 108 NaziMassacres 138 The Blitz 88 OCCUPATION Occupied Soviet Union. Einsatzgruppen and 3 Relentless German bombing campaign executions of communists and Jews. Babi Yar. targets London and other British cities. Governments in Exile 110 Effect on the civilian population. The French, Polish, Czechs, and other peoples MoscowSaved 140 conquered by Hitler establish governments German advance halted by Russian winter and (cid:79)REFUGE FROM THE BLITZ 90 in exile in Britain. determined Soviet resistance. BritainOrganizes for Total War 92 (cid:79)CHARLES DE GAULLE 112 America on the Brink 142 Evacuation of children. The internment of Worsening relations between America and Japan aliens. New roles for women in the workforce. (cid:79)PROPAGANDA 114 over China and the Japanese occupation of GERMANY Civil defense measures. Rationing. French Indochina. US policy hardens. TheSecret War 116 TRIUMPHANT (cid:79)THE HOME FRONT IN EUROPE 94 The intelligence war, ciphers, and code- (cid:79)FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT 144 breaking. The German Enigma code and the 1940 America Backs Britain 96 Japanese “Purple” deciphered by the Allies. JapanGambles on War 146 68 Roosevelt’s support for Britain in the face of Japan’s decision to seize Southeast Asian opposition from American isolationists. The TheU-Boat War 118 colonies while making pre-emptive strike against Introduction 70 Lend-Lease Act allows the US to provide Success of the German campaign against US Navy. Events leading to Pearl Harbor. much greater material and financial aid. shipping from new bases in France. Timeline 72 Pearl Harbor 148 ItalyEnters the War 98 (cid:79)LIFEONAU-BOAT 120 Japanese surprise attack on US naval base in TheInvasion of Denmark Seeing Hitler’s success, Mussolini invades the Hawaiian Islands. Roosevelt declares it a andNorway 74 southern France. Italy also at war with Greece Hunting the Bismarck 122 “Day of infamy.” America enters the war. German conquest of the two countries. and with Britain in East and North Africa. Sorties by German warships to prey on British Extensive new coastline under German control. Invasion of British Somaliland and Egypt. and neutral shipping. Sinking of the Bismarck. (cid:79)ATTACK ON PEARLHARBOR 150 0U0S4_-000047-_0C0o7n_tCeonnt.tinedndt. in d5d 5 45//1122//0088 1069::1426::3059 5 7 (cid:79)ROUNDING UP THEJEWS 178 Showdown in the Atlantic 204 Battle of the Atlantic 1942–43. Heavy convoy Malta and the Mediterranean 180 losses to German wolf packs, followed by Allied Convoys and naval battles in the Mediterranean. successes against the U-boats. Repeated bombing of Malta. (cid:79)SINKINGOFMERCHANTSHIPS 206 El Alamein 182 Fall of Tobruk. Rommel’s offensive against (cid:79)COMMUNICATIONS 208 THE SHIFTING Egypt. British victory at El Alamein. OVERWHELMING The Invasion of Sicily 210 BALANCE (cid:79)BERNARD LAW MONTGOMERY 184 Allied landings on Sicily. Island taken, but Axis FORCE troops escape to mainland. Fall of Mussolini. 1942 Torch Landings 186 New Italian government seeks peace. 1944 152 US and British landings in Morocco and Algeria. 232 German and Italian surrender in Tunisia. Held by the Gustav Line 212 Introduction 154 Landings at Salerno. Mussolini rescued by Introduction 234 Saving the Soviet Union 188 German paratroops. Allied progress in Italy Timeline 156 Relocation of industries to the east. The role of halted by strong German defensive line. Timeline 236 women in industry and agriculture. The Japanese Onslaught 158 Bombing Germany by Night 214 Battles for the Marianas 238 Japanese conquest of Southeast Asia, the The German Drive to the East 190 Area bombing of German cities by the RAF. Landings on Saipan, Tinian, and Guam. US Dutch East Indies, and the Philippines. Offensive of summer 1942 toward Caucasus Massive raids on Cologne and Hamburg. victory in battle of the Philippine Sea—the and the Baku oilfields. “Great Marianas Turkey Shoot.” The New Japanese Empire 160 Bombing Germany by Day 216 Japan exploits the resources and labor of Soviet Triumph at Stalingrad 192 Bombing of German cities and factories by the Return to the Philippines 240 conquered territories. The Burma Railway. Catastrophic defeat for Germans after fiercest USAAF. Heavy losses on long-distance daylight US landings on the island of Leyte. Vast naval fighting of the war. German Sixth Army raids without fighter escorts. battle of Leyte Gulf. First systematic use of Coral Sea and Midway 162 encircled by Soviet armies. kamikaze attacks. Japanese are checked at Coral Sea, then suffer (cid:79)USAAF RAIDONSCHWEINFURT 218 serious losses to their carrier fleet at Midway. (cid:79)STALINGRAD 194 (cid:79)LANDINGINTHE PHILIPPINES 242 The German War Industry 220 Guadalcanal 164 6 Despite the bombing raids on factories, (cid:79)DOUGLAS MACARTHUR 244 Fierce battles for the island on land and at sea. Germany increases its war production using slave and forced labor. Role of Albert Speer. Suffering China 246 Defending Australia 166 Failings of Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists. US troops make Australia their base. The The FrenchResistance 222 Japanese 1944 offensive into southern China. bombing of Darwin. Fighting in New Guinea. Spread of resistance after German occupation of Vichy zone. Reprisals against local populations. Turning Point in Burma 248 America Organizes for Victory 168 Allies halt Japanese on the Indian border. Galvanization of American industry. Social and Prisoners of War in Europe 224 Operations by Chindits and Stilwell’s Chinese. economic changes. Women in the labor force. THE ALLIES TURN The fate of Allied and Axis POWs. The Red Recapture of Mandalay and Rangoon. Cross. Escapes and punishments. (cid:79)WOMENININDUSTRY 170 THE TIDE (cid:79)JUNGLE WARFAREIN BURMA 250 The Battle of Kursk 226 Secret Armies 172 1943 The failure of German Operation Citadel to The Fall of Rome 252 British SOE and American OSS, promoting 196 eliminate the Kursk salient. Soviet victory in Anzio landings. The long battle for Monte resistance movements in Europe and Asia. vast tank battle in summer 1943. Cassino. US forces enter Rome. Germans Introduction 198 withdraw to new defensive lines in the north. (cid:79)ESPIONAGE 174 (cid:79)GEORGY ZHUKOV 228 Timeline 200 Preparing for D-Day 254 The Holocaust 176 Island-Hopping in the Pacific 230 Planning and training for the invasion of German policy of comprehensive genocide of AlliedLeadersPlan for Victory 202 US advances in New Guinea and on the France. Germans strengthen the Atlantic Wall. the Jews, the “Final Solution.” The building of Conferences at Casablanca, Quebec, Cairo, and Solomons bypass heavily defended Japanese Auschwitz and other death camps. Tehran. Decisions taken on invasion of Europe. positions. Landings on the Gilbert Islands. (cid:79)DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER 256 0U0S4_-000047-_0C0o7n_tCeonnt.tinedndt. in d6d 6 244//1121//0088 1069::1496::4237 D-Day Landings 258 Battle of the Bulge 284 The Battle for Iwo Jima 310 (cid:79)POSTWARREFUGEES 336 Airdrops followed by landings on five beaches. German counter-offensive in the Ardennes. Japanese mount fierce defense of the small US troops met by heavy fire on Omaha Beach. US troops encircled in Bastogne. island from a network of tunnels and bunkers. The Fate of the Defeated 338 Beachheads established by end of the day. The occupation of Japan and Germany. (cid:79)GEORGE S.PATTON 286 Okinawa 312 Nuremberg trials and war trials in Japan. (cid:79)OMAHA BEACH LANDING 260 US troops fight a series of grim battles for the 8 island, while their ships come under repeated The IronCurtain 340 Breakout from Normandy 262 attacks from kamikaze planes. Churchill’s prophetic speech. The Marshall Plan. Fierce German resistance around Caen, St. Lô, Berlin blockade. Permanently divided Germany. and Falaise before Allies can break out from Japan under Siege 314 Normandy and advance toward Paris. Bombing of Japan. Mining of Japanese waters Rebirth of Japan and West Germany 342 and submarine campaign against shipping. US aid to the two conquered nations brings (cid:79)PERSONAL GEAR 264 democracy and economic recovery. Subjects of the Emperor 316 HitlerBombPlot 266 Japanese home front. Determination to fight on The End of Empires 344 Discontent in Germany. Failed attempt by a ENDGAME despite bombing and desperate food shortages. Independence for India and Indonesia, followed group of German officers to assassinate Hitler by other European colonies. Creation of Israel. at his headquarters in Rastenburg. 1945 PotsdamConference 318 288 Conference in occupied Germany. Demand for RedChina 346 Liberation of France unconditional surrender of Japan. Mao’s triumph over the Nationalists in China. andBelgium 268 Introduction 290 The foundation of a new communist state. Liberation of Paris, eastern France, and Belgium. (cid:79)MEDALS 320 Further progress into Germany and the Timeline 292 The Cold War 348 Netherlands delayed by lack of fuel. Hiroshima and Nagasaki 322 The US and the Soviet Union start to build vast Destruction of Germany’s cities 294 Soviet attack in Manchuria. Atomic bombs stockpiles of ever more sophisticated nuclear RedArmyOffensive 270 Fire-bombing of Dresden and other German dropped on two Japanese cities. weapons. The threat of mutual destruction Operation Bagration. Soviet summer cities. At Yalta, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin prevents either side from using them. offensives reach Poland and the Balkans. discuss postwar political settlement. (cid:79)HIROSHIMA 324 The War Remembered 350 Warsaw Uprising 272 (cid:79)THE BOMBING OFDRESDEN 296 JapanSurrenders 326 Memorials to the dead, movies, and other Unsuccessful uprising against the Germans by Japanese reluctantly accept defeat after hearing commemorations of the war. Polish underground army. Soviets fail to come The AlliesInvade the Reich 298 speech by Emperor Hirohito. to their aid. Americans, British, and French cross the Index 352 Rhine. Soviet advances in the East. Desperate 9 Resistance and Civil War last-ditch resistance by the Germans. Acknowledgments 359 inGreece 274 Italian withdrawal. Fighting between resistance Liberating the Nazi Death Camps 300 groups, EDES, and communist-backed ELAS. Discovery of the death camps and the realization of the full extent of the atrocities BalkanSnakepit 276 committed by the Nazis. Two main factions of partisans: royalist Cˇetniks and Tito’s communists. Latter unite with the (cid:79)DISCOVERYOFBELSEN 302 Red Army to liberate Yugoslavia. AFTERMATH FinalOffensives in Europe 304 GermanSecret Weapons 278 Soviets and Americans meet on the Elbe. 1946–1950 Retaliation against Britain through V-weapons: Distrust between the Allies. After desperate 328 flying bombs and rockets. house-to-house fighting Soviets take Berlin. Introduction 330 OperationMarketGarden 280 Deaths of the Dictators 306 Failure of Allied airdrop to capture bridge over Hitler’s suicide in his Berlin bunker. Admiral Timeline 332 the Lower Rhine at Arnhem. Dönitz takes over as head of government. The killing of Mussolini by Italian partisans. Counting the Cost 334 (cid:79)MACHINE AND SUBMACHINE 282 The horrific death toll. Refugees, displaced GUNS (cid:79)VE DAY 308 persons, and prisoners of war. 0U0S4_-000047-_0C0o7n_tCeonnt.tinedndt. in d7d 7 244//1121//0088 1069::2406::1219 Foreword World War II was the largest and most destructive war in history. It shaped the world my generation grew up in, and only now are its long shadows receding. Like any hugely complex historical event, World War II is hard to describe in print. Some brilliant scholars have managed, using impressionistic strokes, to sketch out its major features in relatively few pages, although, perhaps inevitably, their purposeful lines obscure its finer detail. Others have concentrated on specific aspects: shelves groan beneath books on, say, Normandy or the fighting in North Africa. Many Western authors, writing in the chill of the Cold War, failed to recognize the pivotal importance of the Eastern Front, just as Russian historians, preoccupied with their own “Great Patriotic War,” did not do justice to the Western Allies’ efforts. In short, although there is now almost no aspect of the war that is not explored, it remains difficult to find an over-arching history of the conflict, unconstrained by national horizon or the rigid limitations of size and space, aimed at the general reader and properly supported, as such a history must be, by maps and illustrations. I warmly commend this book because it provides exactly that accessible survey that has long been missing. It recognizes that this war flared up out of the embers of the previous one, and does not simply pay proper attention to the dangerous legacy of World War I in Europe, but assesses the effect of Japan’s dissatisfaction with the fruits of its own participation. For instance events in China, too often neglected, are properly considered here. Both the war’s causes, at one end, and its consequences, at the other, are viewed in the round, embedding the conflict in its broader context. The events of the war were inter-related by long and complex threads, and it is misleading to consider any single episode, no matter how significant, in isolation. One of the many virtues of this book is that it tells, on the one hand, the stories of specific battles and campaigns but, on the other, its layout enables the reader to see how these relate to previous and subsequent events. It recognizes the role played by the machinery of war, but at the same time allows many participants to speak at length about their own experiences. The book’s coverage is global. It encompasses events on land, at sea, and in the air, and includes not simply the actions of great men but also the achievements and endurance of the countless thousands of men and women who participated, in a myriad of ways, in this most titanic of all struggles. RICHARD HOLMES, 2009 0U0S8_-000089-_0F0o9r_wFaordrw.inadrdd. in d8d 8 254//1120//0088 1158::3228::4056