- Germany and Italy launched attacks on North Africa starting in 1940 in an effort to control the Mediterranean region. Germany sent General Rommel and his Afrika Corps to push back British forces in North Africa.
- By early 1942, Rommel had succeeded in pushing the British back to Egypt but was eventually defeated by the British at El Alamein under the command of General Montgomery. The Axis powers were then pushed out of North Africa.
- Germany and Italy launched attacks on North Africa starting in 1940 in an effort to control the Mediterranean region. Germany sent General Rommel and his Afrika Corps to push back British forces in North Africa.
- By early 1942, Rommel had succeeded in pushing the British back to Egypt but was eventually defeated by the British at El Alamein under the command of General Montgomery. The Axis powers were then pushed out of North Africa.
- Germany and Italy launched attacks on North Africa starting in 1940 in an effort to control the Mediterranean region. Germany sent General Rommel and his Afrika Corps to push back British forces in North Africa.
- By early 1942, Rommel had succeeded in pushing the British back to Egypt but was eventually defeated by the British at El Alamein under the command of General Montgomery. The Axis powers were then pushed out of North Africa.
- Germany and Italy launched attacks on North Africa starting in 1940 in an effort to control the Mediterranean region. Germany sent General Rommel and his Afrika Corps to push back British forces in North Africa.
- By early 1942, Rommel had succeeded in pushing the British back to Egypt but was eventually defeated by the British at El Alamein under the command of General Montgomery. The Axis powers were then pushed out of North Africa.
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Axis forces are attacking North Africa
• Germany's main target in the Mediterranean region
was North Africa, mainly due to Hitler's alliance with Mussolini. • Despite the alliance with Germany, Italy remained neutral at the beginning of the war. However, with Hitler's conquest of France, Mussolini knew he had to take action. • After the declaration of war on France and Great Britain, Mussolini entered France with his troops. • Mussolini took the next step in North Africa in September 1940. • He used Hitler's attack on Britain to enter Egypt with his troops. Desert fox • By February 1941, the British had retaliated in North Africa, so Hitler sent German tank forces, the African Corps, under the command of General Erwin Rommel. • In late March 1941, Rommel's corps attacked the British. • Surprised, British forces retreated east to Tobruk in Libya. After fierce fighting for Tobruk, the British began to push Rommel back. • By January 1942, Rommel had retreated to where he had begun the offensive. • But in June 1942, the tide of war turned again. Rommel regrouped, pushed the British back across the desert and captured Tobruk - a disastrous loss for the Allies. • Rommel’s successes in North Africa earned him the nickname "Desert Fox". The Allies strike back • After the fall of Tobruk, the British government sent General Bernard Montgomery to take control of British forces in North Africa. • By the time Montgomery arrived, the Germans had advanced to the Egyptian village of El Alamein, west of Alexandria. • They were so buried that British forces could not bypass them. Montgomery concluded that the only way to squeeze them out was a strong frontal attack. • The battle of El Alamein began on the night of October 23. The hook of about 1,000 British cannons completely surprised the opposing soldiers. • They fought back fiercely and held their position for several days. Defeat of the Axis Powers in North Africa • However, by November 4th, Rommel's army had been defeated. • His forces retreated. • As Rommel retreated to the west, the Allies launched Operation Torch. • Allied forces with more than 100,000 troops - mostly Americans - landed in Morocco and Algeria. • US General Dwight Eisenhower led this army. • Trapped between Montgomery's and Eisenhower's armies, Rommel 's corps in Africa was finally defeated in May 1943. US enters the war • Although, the United States had not yet entered the war, Roosevelt and Churchill met secretly and issued a joint declaration called the Atlantic Charter. • The document supported free trade between states and the right of people to choose their own government. • The charter later served as an Allied peace plan at the end of World War II. • Despite sporadic clashes with German submarines, the United States will drag the conflict with another member of the Triple Alliance into the war. • Early in the morning of December 7, 1941, American sailors on Pearl Harbor (Hawaii) were awakened by the sound of explosions. • The Japanese attack has officially begun. • Over 2,000 people died. On the same day, President Roosevelt addressed Congress. Congress accepted his proposal - war on Japan was declared. Fighting in the Pacific • Japanese troops advanced rapidly on the Pacific battlefield. By February 1942, they had reached Singapore, taking control of Guam and the Philippines. • After a series of battles, it seemed impossible to stop the Japanese army. • Doolittle's attack on Tokyo raised American morale and, in a sense, represented a reversal, despite the fact that the bombing was not too successful nor did it do much harm to the Japanese. • Battle of the Coral Sea in May 1942 - a new type of warfare was introduced; the opposing ships did not fire a single bullet at each other and could not be seen at all; instead, the ships were attacked by planes taking off from the aircraft carrier. Battle of Midway • Battle of Midway, June 1942 - Thanks to Allied code-breakers, Admiral Chester Nimitz, the commander-in-chief of the US Pacific Fleet, knew that huge Japanese forces were heading for Midway. • Admiral Yamamoto commanded the Japanese fleet himself. He hoped that the attack on Midway would pull the entire American Pacific Fleet from Pearl Harbor to defend the island. • With American forces hidden behind the horizon, Nimitz allowed the Japanese to launch an attack on the island. • The strategy succeeded. U.S. pilots destroyed 332 Japanese planes, all four aircraft carriers and one support ship. • Yamamoto ordered his crippled fleet to withdraw. By June 7, 1942, the battle was over. The Battle of Stalingrad • After the surrender of the Balkans, Hitler, as we know, suddenly attacked the Soviet Union, more precisely Moscow and Leningrad. • In the summer of 1942, Hitler sent the Sixth Army under the command of General Friedrich Paulus to occupy the oil fields in the Caucasus Mountains and Stalingrad (now known as Volgograd), the great industrial center of the Red Army. • All this culminated in the conflict known as the Battle of Stalingrad. • The Battle of Stalingrad began in August 1942. • The situation seemed desperate for the Soviets, especially after the Luftwaffe's night bombings. • In early November 1942, the Germans controlled 90 percent of the destroyed city. Ignoring the losses, Stalin ordered his generals to defend the city bearing his name at all costs. • Then came another Russian winter. On November 9, Soviet troops launched a counterattack outside the city and cut off supplies to the German army. The Battle of Stalingrad • General Paulus begged Hitler to order a retreat. • However, Hitler refused, adding that the city "should have been held at all costs". • As early as February 2, 1943, about 90,000 frozen, half- starved German soldiers surrendered to the Soviets. • This was all that was left of Hitler's Sixth Army, which numbered 330,000 soldiers. • The defense of Stalingrad cost the Soviets more than a million soldiers. The city was practically destroyed. • However, the Germans were now in retreat, and the Soviets were constantly pushing them west. Conference in Casablanca • In January 1943, a conference was held in Casablanca, Morocco. • Participants: US President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill who planned a future global military strategy for the Western Allies. (Stalin refused to attend even though he was invited. • The plan was to concentrate their efforts against Germany in the hope of withdrawing German forces from the Eastern Front and increasing supplies to the Soviet Union. • Although they would begin to concentrate forces in England, preparing for a possible landing in northern France, they decided to first concentrate their efforts on the Mediterranean by launching an invasion of Sicily and the Italian mainland aimed at ousting Italy from the war. • They also agreed to step up their strategic campaign to bomb Germany. • On the last day of the Conference, President Roosevelt announced that Churchill and he had decided that the only way to ensure post-war peace was to adopt a policy of unconditional surrender. The capitulation of Italy • While the battle for Stalingrad was at its peak, Stalin continued to encourage the British and Americans to invade France. • However, Roosevelt and Churchill decided to invade Italy first - on July 10, 1943, Allied forces landed in Sicily and captured it about a month later. • The conquest of Sicily overthrew Mussolini. On July 25, King Victor Emmanuel III arrested the dictator. • In September 1943, Badoglio, a former war general of the Italian army but prime minister during the war and a close servant of Mussolini, went behind his back to sign a truce with the allies after the fall of Sicily. • He saw what the future was and wanted to mitigate the damage to his country, so he went to King Emanuel, who accepted the terms of surrender. • Italy capitulated in September 1943, but Mussolini managed to escape north.