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The End of WWII in Europe and the Aftermath

Review. After D-Day, the Allied forces continued to push toward Germany.The Germans launched a massive counter-attack at the Ardennes Forest which proved a disastrous failure for the Germans and a turning point for the Allied forces.In April of 1945, the Red Army reached Berlin.The end of the war

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The End of WWII in Europe and the Aftermath

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    1. The End of WWII in Europe and the Aftermath 10.8 Discuss the human costs of the war, with particular attention to the civilian and military losses in Russia, Germany, Britain, the United States, China and Japan.

    2. Review After D-Day, the Allied forces continued to push toward Germany. The Germans launched a massive counter-attack at the Ardennes Forest which proved a disastrous failure for the Germans and a turning point for the Allied forces. In April of 1945, the Red Army reached Berlin. The end of the war in Europe was only one month away.

    3. Hitler’s Suicide and Germany’s Surrender

    4. The Death Toll

    5. Making Sense of the Numbers The Soviet Union had the highest military and civilian casualties, followed by China and then Germany. The Nazis killed over 14 million people in their labor and death camps. They murdered six million Jews. London, Berlin, Dresden, and Tokyo were heavily bombed with high civilian casualties. Millions of Chinese civilians were murdered by the Japanese. The Atomic bomb killed over 250,000 civilians in Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Total estimated deaths during WWII range between 40 and 50 million.

    6. Europe after WWII

    7. The Bombing of London

    8. The Bombing of Hamburg

    12. War Crimes Bringing Justice and Order Back to the World. After WWII, the Allied leaders agreed to hold trials in Germany, Japan, and Italy for those that committed crimes against humanity. The Nuremberg Trials sought justice for the Jews and eight million Poles, Slavs, and Gypsies that were murdered in the Nazi Death Camps.

    14. Justice Served? Of the 22 accused of crimes against humanity: 11 were sentenced to execution. 3 were acquitted. 3 were given life imprisonment. 4 were given prison terms of 10 to 20 years. Execution sentences were carried out on October 6th, 1946.

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