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#17
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Thus, Pearl Harbor truly marked the first day in a long march toward Austria's freedom... There was no question that the US participation was critical to the end of the war, and December 7 was the start of major American participation. But I look at it more as a turning point in the overall struggle against the Nazis. The force of US industry combined with fresh troops was certainly necessary to swing the course of the war, which had been very one-sided in favor of Germany up to that point. However, to say that it was the start or the first day diminishes the role of those people who had been struggling, and dying in large numbers in the battle against the Nazis for the previous two years. They had been engaged in fighting on their home soil, and it was a struggle for survival. The British had already rebuffed the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain, and maintained superiority over the seas with the sinking of the Bismarck. The eastern front was opened up only six months prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor with the invasion of Russia, and you could equally say that the war would not have ended as it had without Russian participation. Their subsequent losses were staggering in comparison to the other allies, and they contributed huge amounts of armor and soldiers. Some of the largest battles of the war took place on the eastern front, involving thousands of tanks and millions of soldiers in single battle lines. Had these resources not been tied up on the eastern front, it would have been nowhere near as easy to march against Berlin from the west. While the Russians were immediately forced into fight when they were invaded, the US took some time to mobilize, and it wasn't until almost another year had elapsed before Allied forces moved against the Afrikacorps in Morocco and Algeria with US participation. In the meantime, the Russians endured the siege of Stalingrad, and the accompanying losses. There are many events that could be classified as the start of the resistance against Hitler, and my contention is that the first step was in the declaration of war against Germany by England and France, since that signaled the end of the policy of appeasement. |
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