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Objective 10.02 Identify military, political, and diplomatic turning points of the war and determine their significance to the outcome and aftermath of.

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Presentation on theme: "Objective 10.02 Identify military, political, and diplomatic turning points of the war and determine their significance to the outcome and aftermath of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Objective 10.02 Identify military, political, and diplomatic turning points of the war and determine their significance to the outcome and aftermath of the conflict.

2 Major Concepts The U.S. at War The Influence of Propaganda at Home and Abroad Designs for Peace

3 Terms Atomic Bomb: gets force from nuclear reactions of fusion or fission. U.S. only country to use when bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Battle of Britain: 1 st major battle fought entirely by air forces. Largest and most sustained (almost 4 months) bombing campaign yet attempted. Considered 3 rd Reich's 1 st major defeat. Battle of the Bulge: Germany's goal was to split the British and American Allied line in half, capturing Antwerp, Belgium. Then to encircle/destroy 4 Allied armies, forcing Western Allies to negotiate a peace treaty in the Axis Powers’ favor. Failed, but did put a “bulge” in the Allied line.

4 Battle of the Bulge

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6 Destruction of the Atomic Bomb

7 Terms Blitzkrieg: “Lightning War” Offensive military doctrine involving initial bombardment followed by mobile forces attacking w/ speed and surprise to prevent an enemy from forming a defense. Chester Nimitz: Commander in Chief of Pacific Forces for U.S. and Allied forces during WWII. D-Day (Operation Overlord): (June 6, 1944) Day the Battle of Normandy began, which started the Western Allied effort to free mainland Europe from the Nazis during WWII.

8 D-Day

9 Terms Douglas MacArthur: Allied Commander in Philippines during WWII. Commanded invasion of Japan in Nov. 1945 and officially accepted their surrender on Sept. 2, 1945. George Patton: a leading U.S. Army general in WWII in campaigns in North Africa, Sicily, France, and Germany. Holocaust: term used to describe killing of approx. 6 million Euro. Jews during WWII as part of a program of deliberate extermination planned and executed by the Nazi Party in Germany led by Hitler.

10 Holocaust Pics

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15 Terms Newsreels: filmed news stories regularly released in a public presentation, such as prior to and after a movie. Pamphlets: unbound booklets. Esp. important during wartime and political protests as a tool of propaganda. Airdrops: used in WWII to supply inaccessible troops and drop propaganda pamphlets. War Posters: gov’t. propaganda posted to entice public to join the military, buy war bonds, etc. during WWII.

16 War Posters

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19 Terms Iwo Jima: site of Feb.–March 1945 battle between the U.S. and Japan during WWII. Heavily defended by Japanese b/c very strategic. J. Robert Oppenheimer: American physicist who headed the Manhattan Project. “Father of the Atomic Bomb”. Manhattan Project: project to develop 1 st atomic bomb during WWII by the U.S. Refers specifically to period of project from 1941–1946 under control of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Very secretive!

20 Terms Midway: WWII battle of 1942. 1 st major victory for U.S. in Pacific, went on the offensive afterwards. Island-hopping: military strategy used in Pacific during WWII. Pass over Japanese defended islands to take undefended ones. Nuremberg Trials: court proceedings held in Nuremberg, Germany after WWII in which Nazi leaders were tried for war crimes.

21 Terms Okinawa: fierce battle in Pacific during WWII. Previewed what an invasion of Japan would be like. Pearl Harbor: large U.S. Naval base in Hawaii. Attacked by Japanese on Dec. 7 th, 1941. Stalingrad: Soviets vs. Germans during WWII. Turning point for the Soviets b/c turned away the Germans.

22 Terms Tehran: capital city of Iran. British and Russians entered during WWII. Stalin, Churchill, and FDR attended the Tehran Conference here. V-E Day, V-J Day: Victory in Europe (May 7 th and 8 th, 1945), Victory in Japan (Aug. 15 th, 1945). Casablanca, Potsdam: Casablanca- Conference in 1943 between Churchill and FDR. Also important air base for strikes in Euro. Potsdam- Truman, Churchill and Stalin discussed fate of Germany and post-WWII Euro.

23 Potsdam Conference


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