World War II: The Pacific Theater

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World War II: The Pacific Theater. Japan. The Pacific Ocean. Canada. China. USA. SE Asia. Australia. The Pacific War. Dates: July 7, 1937 - August 14, 1945 Began with the Second Sino-Japanese war, between China and Japan Concluded with Japan’s surrender to the Allied powers. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of World War II: The Pacific Theater

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Japan

USA

Canada

Australia

China

SE Asia

The Pacific Ocean

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The Pacific War

• Dates: July 7, 1937 - August 14, 1945• Began with the Second Sino-Japanese war,

between China and Japan• Concluded with Japan’s surrender to the

Allied powers

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Prelude to War

• Japan seeks to establish “The Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere”– “a bloc of Asian nations led by the Japanese

and free of Western powers”– Invasions of Manchuria and Korea follow

• Three political forces in Japan:– Emperor Hirohito– Civilian Government– Military branches

• The army informs the civilian gov’t of the Manchuria campaign two months after it begins.

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Prewar

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1932

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1937

AB

C

D

“ABCD Encirclement”

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1940

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1941

Dec 8/7 1941

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Fleet Admiral Yamamoto

Fleet Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto

“The US fleet is a dagger pointed at our throat and must be destroyed.”

“I can run wild for six months,after that, I have no expectation of success.”

- Yamamoto, during discussions on the planned Pearl Harbour Attack

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Attack on Pearl Harbour

Dec 7, 1941. “A day that will live in infamy”

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Pearl Harbour

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Mitsubishi A6M “Zero” FighterNakajima B5N torpedo bomber

Aichi D3A dive bomber

Japanese Aircraft

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The Attack

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The Attack

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Aftermath

"Being saturated and satiated with emotion and sensation, I went to bed and slept the sleep of the saved and thankful.”

- Winston Churchill

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1941

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1942

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Bataan Death March April 1942

– 12,000 Americans walked 60 miles to a POW camp

– No food or water– 5,000 died

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Battle of Coral Sea

First naval battle carried out entirely by aircraft.

The enemy ships never even came into contact with each other

•May 7, 1942

•Strategic Allied victory—halted the Japanese advance on Australia

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The Battle Of Midway

June 4-7 1942

6 months after Pearl Harbour

Yamamoto seeks to capture Midway atoll and thus confront and destroy the US Navy’s carrier forces.

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Midway Order of Battle

US forces:

3 carriers

~50 support ships

233 carrier aircraft

127 land-based aircraft

Japanese forces:

4 carriers

7 battleships

~150 support ships

248 carrier aircraft

16 floatplanes

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Plan of Attack

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The Battle of Midway

• The first major carrier vs. carrier engagement• Decided by cryptanalysis, tactics, radar, pilot

skill, weather, and luck.

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The Battle of Midway

• Scouts from the US fleet find the Japanese Fleet first

• A delayed scout means the Japanese fleet receives a warning of US carriers only minutes before the first US planes attack

• After losing many planes in ineffective strikes, US dive bombers manage to set three Japanese carriers on fire.

• A Japanese counterstrike does heavy damage to one US carrier

• Japanese battleships never see combat

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The Battle of Midway

US forces:

3 carriers, 1 lost

~50 support ships, 1 destroyer lost

360 aircraft, 98 lost

307 dead

Japanese forces:

4 carriers, 4 lost

7 battleships, 0 lost

~150 support ships, 1 cruiser lost

264 aircraft, 228 lost

3058 dead

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1943-1944

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Strategic Bombing

B-29 Superfortress bombers

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Island-Hopping Warfare

American and Australian troops land in Borneo

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Guadalcanal—8/42-2/43

• Who: US vs. Japan• Where: Island near Australia—

one of Solomon Islands• What: One of the most vicious campaigns

– Japanese put up a fierce resistance– US has superior air and naval power

• Results:– First time US land troops defeat Japanese– Americans are able to secure the island

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Island-Hopping Warfare

American Troops assaulting Iwo Jima

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1944-1945

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The Final Year

• The US retakes the Philippines in a long and costly campaign.

• Borneo, Iwo Jima and the Okinawa fall, with heavy losses on both sides.

• The military leadership of Japan refuses to give up, in spite of the loss of the bulk of their forces.

• An edict is issued, ordering civilians on the main Japanese islands to construct bamboo spears and meet the invaders on the beaches.

• US Bombers produce a firestorm in Tokyo, killing 100,000 people in two days.

• The US, Britain and China issue the Potsdam Declaration, demanding Japan’s surrender.

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Iwo Jima

• February-March 1945• Island off the coast of Japan—Japanese soil

– Longest sustained aerial offensive of the war

– More marines sent than in any other battle– 100,000 men fighting on an island the 1/3

the size of Manhattan– Japanese fought from below ground—Allies

rarely saw a soldier– The battle was won inch-by-inch

Volcanic island deeply entrenched

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Iwo Jima

• Results: US win– Provides a link in the

chain of bomber bases– By the war’s end,

2,400 B-29 bombers and 27,000 crewmen made emergency landings.

– “4 marines raising US flag”

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Okinawa

• Casualties– US—12,500 killed; 36,000 wounded– Japan—93,000 troops killed; 94,000 civilians

killed (many killed themselves)

• Kamikazes—suicide pilots– Crashed planes loaded with explosives– Sank 30 US vessels

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Hiroshima - 90,000 to 100,000 persons were killed immediately - 145,000 persons perish from the bombing by the end of 1945.

NagasakiLeveled Area: 6.7 million square metersDamaged Houses: 18,409CasualtiesKilled------73,884Injured-----74,909Total------148,793(Large numbers of people died in the following years from the effects of radioactive poisoning.)

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Nuclear Strikes

Aug 6, 1945. Uranium bomb “Little Boy” dropped on Hiroshima, killing 140,000

Aug 9, 1945. Plutonium bomb “Fat Man” dropped on Nagasaki, killing 74,000

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Japan Surrenders

Representatives of Japan’s Foreign Ministry, Army and Navy appear to sign the surrender aboard USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay

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The Cost

• 2,000,000 Japanese Soldiers dead• 300,000 Allied Soldiers dead• 600,000 - 1,000,000 Japanese civilians dead• 11,000 American civilians dead• 60,000 Korean civilians dead• Mass devastation of Japanese infrastructure• Indigenous people of north and western Pacific

islands devastated by disease, cultural contamination, collateral damage, and atrocities.

• The list continues…