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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Wars And Battles > World War II
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > W

World War II, Wars And Battles

Related Category: Wars And Battles

Though determined to maintain its neutrality, the United States was gradually drawn closer to the war by the force of events. To save Britain from collapse the Congress voted lend-lease aid early in 1941. In Aug., 1941, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt met Churchill on the high seas, and together they formulated the Atlantic Charter as a general statement of democratic aims. To establish bases to protect its shipping from attacks by German submarines, the United States occupied (Apr., 1941) Greenland and later shared in the occupation of Iceland; despite repeated warnings, the attacks continued. Relations with Germany became increasingly strained, and the aggressive acts of Japan in China, Indochina, and Thailand provoked protests from the United States.

Efforts to reach a peaceful settlement were ended on Dec. 7, 1941, when Japan without warning attacked Pearl Harbor, the Philippines, and Malaya. War was declared (Dec. 8) on Japan by the United States, the Commonwealth of Nations (except Ireland), and the Netherlands. Within a few days Germany and Italy declared war on the United States.

The first phase of the war in the Pacific was disastrous for the Allies. Japan swiftly conquered the Philippines (where strong resistance ended at Corregidor), Malaya, Burma (Myanmar), Netherlands East Indies (Indonesia), and many Pacific islands; destroyed an Allied fleet in the Java Sea; and reached, by mid-1942, its furthest points of advance in the Aleutian Islands and New Guinea.

Australia became the chief Allied base for the countermoves against Japan, directed by Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Admiral Nimitz, and Admiral Halsey. The first Allied naval successes against Japan were scored in the battles of the Coral Sea and Midway, where U.S. bombers knocked out the major part of Japan's carrier fleet and forced Japan into retreat. Midway was the first decisive blow against the Axis by Allied forces. On land the Allies took the offensive in New Guinea and landed (Aug. 7, 1942) on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands.



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Alamein, El
Anzio
Atlantic Charter
atomic bomb
Axis
Battle of Britain
Battle of the Bulge
Omar Nelson Bradley
Cairo Conference
Casablanca Conference
Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill, British statesman, soldier, and author
cold war
Jean FranCois Darlan
Charles de Gaulle
Disarmament Conference
Dunkirk, town, France
Dwight David Eisenhower
European Economic Community
European Union
fascism
Finnish-Russian War
Francisco Franco
Maurice Gustave Gamelin
Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Germany
Great Britain
Great Depression
Guadalcanal
Halsey, William Frederick, Jr.
Hiroshima
Adolf Hitler
Indian National Congress
Japan
Jews
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
Ivan Stepanovich Konev
League of Nations
lend-lease
Douglas MacArthur
Maginot Line
Marine Corps, United States
Montgomery, Bernard Law, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein
Monte Cassino
Moscow Conferences
Munich Pact
Benito Mussolini
Nagasaki
National Socialism
Chester William Nimitz
Normandy campaign
North Africa, campaigns in
Pearl Harbor
Henri Philippe PEtain
Potsdam Conference
Quebec Conference
Erwin Rommel
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Karl Rudolf Gerd von Rundstedt
Sino-Japanese War, Second
Spanish civil war
Tehran Conference
United Nations
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
United States
Vichy
Volgograd
war crimes
Maxime Weygand
World War I
Yalta Conference
Georgi Konstantinovich Zhukov

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History > Modern Europe


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