THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1945 BRIEF HISTORY OF WAR IN EUROPE: Allies Snatch Victory from Nazis After Being Close to Defeat By Carl C. Cramer Associated Press Staff Writer Germany's dream of world conquest has come to a shatter- ing end with the collapse of the Reich which Adolf Hitler boasted was to endure a thousand years. Ended is the European phase of the second great war of the century, a war which is estimated to have cost close to $1,000,- 000,000,000 (one trillion) in money and the lives of more than 6,000,000 men. The collapse of Germany was fore- shadowed last July 20 when an at- tempt was made to kill Hitler and seize power by what the Dictator said was a small clique of "foolish, crimi- nally stupid" German officers. This revolt among Hitler's entour- age, coming almost exactly a year after the sorry lackey Benito Musso- lini had been broken in Italy; the rapid advance of Russian armies in the east, the drive of Allied armies in Italy, and the success of the most difficult amphibious invasion in his- tory, the invasion of Normandy, all suggested that the German army was approaching a debacle. At the start, the war looked to the world, grossly underrating German preparations, like the throw of a mad adventurer. It turned out that the Allies snatched victory only after hair- breadth escape from defeat. Hitler opened it with a razzle- dazzle of propaganda, secret weap- ons, armored spearheads, bombing armadas, parachute troops, fifth col- umns and political sleight-of-hand which quickly established him as a sinister Barnum of war. Before it ended, merged with the war in Asia and the Pacific by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, it had been fought on all the oceans and continents. "In this war there will be no vic- tors and losers, but merely survivors and annihilated," Hitler threatened, and accordingly he set a pace for ruthlessness and cruelty unpreceden- ted in modern war. The conflict became:- A war of secret battles-long, silent struggles to smash his invasion fleet by Britain, to master the submarine which imperiled the United States as never before, to crush robot bomb launching sites in France. A war of secret weapons--in which the allies with radar, a brand new conception of massed fleets of in- vasion barges, the technique of mass bombing through clouds, and a host of inventions, outdid Hitler. War in the air- in which whole armies of millions engaged. For the first .time the capitals of great nations and scores of other cities were marked for methodical destruc- tion. A war of cities-Stalingrad, Lenin- grad, Odessa, Sevastopol, Cassino- whose streets and houses were turned into trenches and forts. A new tech- nique of battle in the rubble of cities developed. London was blitzed, and Berlin shattered. A war underground between Quis- lings and armies of resistance, and a war of psychology in which the four freedoms and the Atlantic Charter were used to combat Nazi ideology. A war fought in the extremes of weather and terrain, from Africa to the Arctic, in the world's worst bogs and jungles and most inaccessible mountains. The war saw the advent of the flying bomb and many different rocket weapons, the blockbuster, rapid firing guns which made artil- lery barrages more intense than ever, mass mobility of tanks and vehicles, the air-borne army, the flying battle- ship, amphibious invasion on a grander scale than ever. All this was started about 3 o'clock on Friday morning, Sept. 1, 1939, when German armies i n v a d e d Poland. Despising the Poles too much to' declare war formally, Hitler an- nounced only that he was answering "force with force." With smug conceit he declared, "I am putting on the uniform (the field gray of the German army) and I shall take it off only in victory or death. Poland... Hitler planned a blitzkreig-a lightning war-and probably never expected that England and France would do more than wage a token war when they saw the uselessness of trying to save their ally. Amazing armored spear he cads sliced through the Polish cavalry divisions to the Wisla (Vistula), trapped a huge army in the Kutno area west of Warsaw and another random in the south. In 18 days Hitler boasted of Vic- 1 tory in a speech at Danzig, though it was Sept. 27 before Warsaw, battered to a pulp surrendered. Hitler, claimed 300,000 prisoners. Taking cognizance of British pre-; dictions of a long war-three years-3 Hitler declared he was ready for a' seven years' war. The anme day Joachim Von Rib- for the bombs to fall. None fell. This was the "phoney war." On Sept. 3 the French announced that their army had come "in con- tact" with the Germans, but the French preferred to have the Ger- mans throw themselves on the Mag- inet Line and struck into German territory only for a few thousand yards near Saarbrucken. Their "of- fensive" never developed. The British were dropping leaflets on Germany all winter long as Hit- ler alternately threatened "total war" and held out hopes of peace. Norway and Denmark*. . On April 9, 1940, the war broke out with all its fury. Hitler's troops slipped into Denmark and invaded Norway by sea and air. A few goose- stepping soldiers and a military band marched in and took Oslo. Soldiers hidden in the holds of previously- arrived ships seized Narvik, Bergen, Stavanger, Trondheim and other coastal points. The British, caught napping, land- ed a few thousand Allied troops on both sides of Trondheim and later at Narvik, but were forced to with- draw. On April 30 Hitler proclaimed a complete victory, and within a short time Allied troops had with- drawn. Battle of France *** May 10 the great blow in the west fell on Holland, Belgium, Luxem- bourg and France. The fate of Ger- many would be sealed for 1,000 years by the outcome, Hitler told his sol- diers. Swarms of parachutists descended on the airports near Rotterdam, the Hague and Amsterdam, seized the bridge at Moerdijk, south of Rodder- dam. The vaunted Dutch "water line" proved ineffectual. Holland fell in four days. The Nazis overwhelmed 'the Bel- gien fort, Eden Emael, and rushed their columns across the vaunted Albert Canal near Maastricht. In three days German tanks sur- prised the French, seized Sedan and were racing for the English Channel, with fleets of motorcyclists spreading fire and terror ahead of the armored detachments. The Germans reached the Channel at Abbeville on May 21 and King Leopold announced the surrender of his 300,000-man Belgian Army on May 25. Dunkerque, the British epic of the war, in which a strange ar- mada of 900 warships, skiffs, tugs and yachts rescued an army of 337,000 men from the beaches, was over by June 4. For four years the Kaiser's armies had fought to win control of the Channel ports. Hitler got them in less than a month. In vain Gen. Maxime Weygand set "mousetraps" for tanks along the Somme. Turning south on June 6, Hitler brushed aside the vaunted French army. The Maginot Line was turned. The French Government. evacuated Paris June 10, the same day Mussolini committed his "stab in the back" and sent troops into the border area of France, where they dug in without any attempt to help Hitler clean up. Taking over the French Govern- ment, Marshal Petain announced on June 17, "with a broken heart," that he had been compelled to ask Hitler, as one soldier to another, for an hon- orable armistice. The high point of the war-for Hitler-came at Compeigne on June 21 in the railway car where Marshall Foch had dictated peace terms to Germany in 1918, and France signed an armistice. Grandly pleased by this revenge for the "dictates of Versailles," Hitler visited the tomb of Napoleon. Battle of Briloilla,. . Most pol)ular song in Germany was "We're Sailing Against Britain." Britain seemed helpless. She had lost all but a few score guns and tanks. The RAP was outnumbered. She fell back on hastily organized home guards to fight from haystacks and hedgerows. Hastily importing hunting rifles, old tanks and World War guns from America, Prime Minister Churchill hunched his head down between his great shoulders and declared, "We will fight on the beaches and the landing grounds, in the fields, in the streets. on the hills we wil never Grimly, 700 Spitfires and Hurri- canes opposed the entire German air force. British fighting planes mount- ing eight guns, and radar, which gave warning of coming raids, prob- ably saved the British in the aerial battle that lasted from August through May. But 50,000 Britons died from bombs. Sept. 13, 1940 when the Germans lost 185 planes and were forced toswitch to night bombing, has been called one of the decisive battles of the war-a Water- loo or Trafalgar. In September and October the Germans were assembling their in- vasion fleet of 3,000 barges and 4,000,000 tons of ships. Not until 1944 did Churchill disclose the rea- son why the Germans never invaded England-the invasion fleet was smashed by the RAF bomber com- mand before it could leave port. The Balkans .. . Mussolini believed the Greek gen- erals had been bought off and in- vaded Greece from Albania on Oct. 28, 1940, three hours after a 3 a.m. ultimatum, and thereupon came one of the big surprises of the war. In- stead of wilting, the Greeks fought. Not merely did they ambush and slaughter thousands of Italians a few miles inside Greek territory, but they captured Corriza and other strongholds in a counter-invasion. Hitler, who had not been informed of Mussolini's plans, let his partner sweat in his trouble though the win- ter, one by one, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria had fallen into the Hitler lineup-Romania on Oct. 8, 1940, when German troops moved in following the iron guard's ouster of King Carol, Hungary on Nov. 20 when she joined the Axis alliance, and Bulgaria on March 1, 1941, when she signed the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Pact. Now the screws were put to Yugoslavia. But an uprising upset the Yugo- slav pact with Hitler, and on Sun- day morning, April 6, the German dictator launched his Balkan cam- paign with a ferocious bombing of Belgrade. Striking from Bulgaria, the Ger- mans in three days had broken across the Vardar Valley severing the links between Greece and Yugo- slavia, and had reached the Aegean, seizing Salonika. In vain a tiny British force which had been rushed in from Africa, made a stand at Thermopylae. The Nazi mechanized divisions marched into Athens on April 27 and again the British car- ried out a costly evacuation, this time from the Peloponnesus. The Swastika had floated over 'the Acropolis only about three weeks when Hitler struck his most auda- cious air-borne blow, invading Crete on May 20. Ten days later the Brit- ish admitted the loss of the island. 4frica ... The battle of Africa really started in the tragic event of July 3, 1940, when the British attacked the French fleet at Mers-El-Kebir to prevent warships of their former allies from falling into enemy hands. Six times the battle swept back and forth across the rim of North Africa, but in the end the Germans could not win because they did not control the Mediterranean. The Ital- ian fleet soon was driven into hiding. Marshal Rudolfo Graziani began an attack on Egypt on Aug. 6, 1940, simultaneously with an invasion of British Somaliland. He got no far- ther than Sidi Barrani, where the British under Wavell started a light- ning comeback in December which reached beyond Bengasi. But the British fell back even faster in the spring when' they were forced to send troops to Greece. Again in Novem- ber, 1941, the British launched an offensive which relived Tobruk shortly before the last Italian strong- hold in Ethiopia surrendered. Not long thereafter came Pearl Harbor, and Hitler declared war on the United States. His ultimate ex- tirpation began to loom on the hori- zon then, for he had turned the spigot which was to produce a flood of allied war material and men. But there still were black days in store for the Allies, and Sunday, June 2, 1944 ranks with blackest of theM all. On that day Marshal Erwin Romx= reel's Africa corps took Tobruk in a surprise thrust which carried him to within 60 miles of Alexandria. A junction of German and Japanese forces on the shores of the Indian FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW NEW YORK Three-Year Day Course Four-Year Evening Course CO-EDUCATIONAL Ocean was threatened. The Germans were preparing the summer offensive which might break the Soviet Union and which was to take them from Kharkov to Stalingrad. The Allies had lost Singapore, The Philippines, Burma, the Dutch East Indies and parts of the Aleutians. Australia still was menaced, despite two Japanese air-sea defeats in the Coral Sea and at Midway in May and June. Almost the brighest spot in the Allied picture was that only three weeks before the 'British had car- ried out their first 1,000 bomber raid against Cologne. Air and tank forces rushed to Af- rica eventually turned the tide, per- mitting Gen. Sir Bernard L. Mont- gomery's Eighth Army to score its greatest victory at El Alamein in Egypt on Oct. 23, 1942, and begin its march to meet the American and British forces of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower which landed in Morocco and Algeria on Nov. 7. Trapped on Cap Bon in Tunisia, the Germans and Italians finally sur- rendered on May 12, 1943, ending the battle of Africa, and the stage wasj set for the invasion of Italy. Axis casualties in Tunisia were placed 341,000. Russia,.... Until Sunday morning, June 22, 1941, everything went well with Hit- ler's war. That was the day he loosed his invasion of Russia. Joined by Finland, Romania, Hun- gary and Italy; Hitler boasted of the greatest front in history-2,000 miles from the Arctic to the Black sea. Stories from Berlin said the Nazis be- lieved they would crush Russia in three to six weeks. Swiftly the German armies sliced through Russian-annexed territories of Poland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Karelia, Bessarabia, swept across White Russia and the Ukraine. Before the summer campaign was done Hitler had trapped one huge "kettle" of Soviet soldiers after another, thrown an iron ring about Leningrad, reached the suburbs of Moscow, captured Kharkov. Russia "never again will rise," he declared in October, launching a "final assault" on Moscow. Another final assault was ordered in Novem- ber. Moscow did not fall. Then, at the right time, the Russian counter- offensive was launched. The Ger- mans were caught in the worst Rus- sian winter in years, and the retreat along the Napoleonic Road disaster was begun. In August, 1943, the Germans reached their highwater mark of conquest at Stalingrad. It has been underway ever since, with pauses. Official Russian figures place Rus- sian dead, captured and wounded at 5,300,000. German dead and captured at 7,800,000. The Germans have claimed as high as 10,000,000 Russian casualties. Italy.. The Allies invasion of Europe really began with the attack on Sicily by (Continued on Page 7) -a- 1 -~ I LET'S GiO.. HIROIT1 "3 - r 'sy z } ,.... I I / ,,; K> 5 .lx. :i >h1 a£his " " ?.. ,N f "° wb.>..:' <> I I- G,'' ll r :® NU IT'S VOJIR TURN NOW, fhl0Rl'TO Firs( you sawv fMussolini "bite time duust"' . . . and now your aily Aidolf amld isa cohorts are reapiog the rewatrd of all who would enslave people by tyramuy. '1(!UR TIME, 1 AIA , COME, IRlOHf fTO! The : fll might of liberty-Joving nations is focused upon you with a deteriina- tion to teach you your lesson with fina lity. BEi: SUI , WlIE lRO 'Pt O! We Americans shall do all in our power to hasten that day when you, too, shall pay for your greed, your injustice, your devilish doe- trine of militarism. i. I q? :«::;' ' *d * .. -l", ..'.* wow f . FAOPIIF" ,.... I IM.-..m~m I