CHAPTER XVII
On September 1, 1939, Germany
invaded Poland to start World War II, which was the costliest, bloodiest, most
colossal war in the history of man. This war embraced all the continents but
one‑South America;
North America became involved in the Aleutians.
In 1933 when Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany by the aging General
Von Hindenburg, he quickly succeeded in uniting the German people and molding
them to his purpose. By 1936, the Third Reich had amassed enough strength to
break with the tottering League of Nations and force the
annulment of the Treaty of Locarno. Germany
and Italy were
preparing for war. They had a tremendous military advantage over the other
countries of Europe who were still clinging desperately
to the hope of peace.
In 1937, Neville Chamberlain
succeeded Stanley Baldwin as Prime Minister of Great Britain. His foreign
policy was based on appeasement. This policy was based on two principles: (1)
that the Treaty of Versailles was unjust, in its treatment of Germany,
and (2) that if these wrongs were rectified, Germany
would re‑enter The League of Nations and resume cooperation with a
peaceful Europe. The German people dreaded another war
and reached out eagerly toward what Chamberlain described as "peace in our
time."
A crisis occurred in September
1938 when Germany
demanded incorporation into the Reich of the Sudentanland area of Czechoslovakia.
The independence of the Czech Republic
‑ a new nation carved out of Austria‑Hungary
by the Treaty of Versailles ‑ was guaranteed by pacts with France,
and indirectly, Britain.
Rather than risk war, Chamberlain, in a sudden dramatic move, communicated with
Reichsfuehrer Hitler at Berchtesgaden;
after which, he flew to meet with Hitler, Mussolini and Premier Daladier of France,
at the historic Munich conference.
On Sept. 9, 1938, an
agreement was signed. The vital Sudetenland with its war
industries, strong defenses and its power to resist was sacrificed. In return,
Chamberlain came home with an agreement with Hitler that neither side wanted
war, and that Germany
and Britain
would settle all future questions by consultation rather than by military
action. This was Chamberlain"s "peace in our time."
On March 10, 1939, sudden revolt flared in Slovakia
against the Czech government in Prague.
On March 13, thousands of German troops moved into position along the now
defenseless borders of Czechoslovakia.
A day later, President Hacha was summoned to Berlin
to confer with Hitler and after being intimidated, he placed his country under
the "protection" of Germany.
Three hours later, Hitler was in Prague.
Overnight,
"appeasement" became a word despised‑a symbol of weakness and
failure. Frantically, Britain
and France
began preparations for war; England
introduced a limited form of conscription and France
deluded herself in the invincibility of its Maginot Line. It took the bitter,
tragic lesson of 1940 to teach the democracies that there was no such thing as
limited war when the enemy was prepared for total war. For France,
the lesson came too late.
France
reaffirmed her alliance with Poland
and Britain
signed mutual assistance pacts with Poland
and Turkey and
made formal guarantees of the independence of Greece
and Rumania.
All this was an effort to create a bloc of small, powerful nations, to surround
Germany with a
periphery of strength to limit further German aggression. On March 24, 1939, nine days after the German
entry into Prague, Hitler made
demands on Poland.
These demands included the return to Germany
of the free city of Danzig and the right to construct a
military highway between Germany
proper and East Prussia. In
return, Hitler promised Poland
a free zone in Danzig and a 25-year non‑aggression
pact, which would guarantee the new Polish boundaries as permanent.
Poland,
remembering similar promises to Czechoslovakia
and strengthened by Britain
and France,
refused these demands. In April 1939, the two guarantors opened negotiations
with the Soviet government, the one European nation which possessed an army
capable of challenging Germany
on the eastern front. For months the negotiations dragged on to no avail. Russia's
reluctance was three‑fold: (1) The failure of the Allies to include Russia
in the Munich conference; (2)
skepticism over their desire and ability to wage war against Germany;
and (3) disgust at the blundering methods of Chamberlain. The principal Russian
objective was to push its own borders as far as possible to the west, as a more
impregnable defensive barrier. War, at this time, on the side of Britain,
would not serve this purpose.
Suddenly, without warning, came
the blow that shocked the civilized world‑the German‑Soviet non‑aggression
pact. The announcement came on Aug.
23, 1939, while the Anglo‑French-Soviet discussions were
still in progress. The Allies had suffered a crushing diplomatic defeat.
Hitler's pact with Russia
assured him freedom of action. Her eastern flank secured, and her enemies in
the west weak and bewildered, Germany
was now ready to invade Poland;
two days later, Britain
and France
declared war.
The nations taking part in this
opening campaign of World War 11 were Germany,
Poland and Russia;
the entire action was fought on Polish soil. The incredible speed of Hitler's
armed forces in defeating Poland
gave rise to the term "blitzkrieg"‑lightning war. Thirty‑five
days after the opening gun had been fired, Polish resistance was crushed. The
Polish campaign will go down in military annals as one of the most brilliant
triumphs in the history of German arms. A Russian invasion force crossed the
eastern Polish frontier; this sealed the doom of the Polish armies. On Sept.
18, Russian and German forces met at Brest‑Litovsk.
For the 35 days of the Polish
campaign and for approximately eight months afterward, the western front
settled down to a period of strange, unbroken quiet. It was during this period
that newspapers and statesmen all over the world took to calling World War I1
the "phony war" and "sitzkrieg". The two mightiest systems
of fortifications ever developed faced each other across the length of the
Franco‑German frontier. For miles back from the border, the Maginot line
of the French and the Westwall of the Germans (also called the Siegfried line)
bristled with supposedly impregnable, concrete and steel emplacements. In the
Maginot line, the French had concentrated the cream of their troops, heavily
reinforced by regular army units. In the Westwall, the Germans used veterans
thrown in after the Polish campaign. Both lines were armed with the most
destructive weapons ever devised. Yet for nine months nothing happened. Not a
single major engagement developed along the entire frontier.
After the partition of Poland,
Russia had
forced non‑aggression pacts on the three Baltic States,
Lithuania, Latvia
and Estonia. In
effect, these countries were incorporated into the Soviet Union,
a development which actually took place several months later.
On Oct. 7, 1939, the Soviet government made demands on Finland
similar to those made on the Baltic States.
Specifically, Russia
wanted certain islands in the Gulf of Finland as a
protective screen for the great Naval base at Kronstadt. Negotiations proceeded
in deadlock until Nov. 30, 1939
when the Russians bombed Helsinki,
the Finnish capital. Although the Finns fought valiantly and inflicted great
damage to the Soviet onslaught, they were no match for the Russians in manpower
and equipment. Consequently, after less than six weeks, resistance ended and an
armistice, with Germany
as the intermediary, was signed on March
12, 1940. Russia
received everything she asked for‑and more.
On April 9, 1940, Hitler got impatient with the "phony
war" and launched an offensive against neutral Denmark
and Norway. In
one day, he successfully occupied all of Denmark,
which was a springboard to the north. The main action of this campaign was
fought in Norway,
with German, British, Norwegian and some French forces taking part. Hitler's
reason for this attack included several factors. Firstly, he wanted to test the
Allied war strength. Secondary German objectives were (1) to prevent the Allies
from seizing Scandinavia as a base from which to attack
north Germany
and (2) to secure air and submarine bases as near as possible to Britain
and the vital Allied shipping lanes.
Oslo,
the capital, fell in one day. The same thing happened at Bergen,
Trondheim, Stavanger
and Narvik, the principal cities. Sabotage, espionage and treachery worked with
excellent efficiency. The Norwegian government and population were infested
with German agents and local traitors. Corrupt officials had been bribed and
promised high positions in the "new order". One of these officials
was Quisling whose name later became the term used to describe a traitor.
Officers surrendered their troops without firing a shot. After a strong attempt
to recapture Norway,
the British had to withdraw and the campaign came to an end on June 10, 1940. Exactly one month
earlier, Neville Chamberlain was forced to resign and was succeeded by Winston
Churchill, the first lord of the Admiralty, as prime minister.
At last England
had a leader who understood the situation. The Norwegian experiment was
successful. The Allies had revealed themselves as weak and very much unprepared
for war. On May 10, the very same day that Churchill took office, the Nazi
armies struck again. Poland
and Norway were
dress rehearsals to test enemy strength and experiment with new weapons and
military methods. The battle of Western Europe had
begun. In this engagement, the armies of Germany,
Italy, Britain,
France, Holland
and Belgium
participated ‑ an aggregate of some 4,000.000 men.
When this battle was swiftly
concluded, the face of Europe was completely altered. Holland, Belgium
and Luxembourg
had ceased to exist as nations. France,
called the greatest military power on earth, was smashed. Her armies were
broken; two million of her soldiers were captured. Britain,
battered, retreated to the protection of her own island. Never, in so short a
space of time, had such a far‑reaching military decision been
accomplished. On May 15, the Dutch army surrendered and 13 days later King
Leopold of Belgium
surrendered his entire army to the Germans. Now the way was open to attack France,
not by bridging the Maginot Line but through Belgium.
Hitler's armies were successful beyond belief.
After the Belgian surrender, and
the Allied decision to evacuate, one phase of the Battle of Flanders yet
remained to be fought. Defiantly, the British army fell back on Dunkirk,
the one channel port still in Allied hands. Fierce rear‑guard actions by
the remaining French units covered their retreat; so that their British
comrades might escape to fight the enemy once again.
Dunkirk
is still looked upon by military experts as a miracle. Way beyond the
expectations of the British high command, which was that 25% of their army
would be saved, 330,000 men (including French, Dutch and Belgians) were taken
off the bloody beaches of Dunkirk.
From the British coast across the channel, every available boat set out for Dunkirk.
Women, sometimes children, piloted the rescue boats; this motley fleet shuttled
back and forth until every man was safe in Britain.
On June 16, Premier Paul Reynaud
of France, realizing the helplessness of the situation, resigned and was
replaced by Marshal Henri Petain, victor of Verdun in World War I. On June 17,
after more German successes, the 84year old Petain asked for honorable terms
of armistice. On June 21, while fighting was still going on, Hitler presented
his harsh terms in the same railway car at Compiegne
where the Armistice of Nov. 11, 1918
was signed. In addition to stripping France of practically all its defenses,
the agreement called for the military occupation of more than half of the area
of the country, with the French people paying the cost of the occupation‑an
estimated 3 million francs per day. The Germans occupied the entire west coast
of France in
addition to much area in the north. All its naval bases were to be
demilitarized and she was specifically forbidden to render any form of
assistance to Britain
for the remainder of the war.
By far the most provocative
provision of the armistice called for the complete demobilization and
disarmament, at French ports, of all French naval vessels. This provoked a
bitter storm of protest in Britain,
which had agreed to the French surrender, only if the French fleet were put
under British control. The direct result of this French concession was British
military action involving the seizure of all French vessels in
British-controlled waters, which reached its climax in the British attack on
the French fleet in the harbor of Oran,
Algeria. Later,
to allow the French to protect themselves against British attacks, Hitler
permitted the French fleet to be mobilized. This, and other controversies
rising out of the armistice terms, caused a breach between the British and
French governments, which was never healed.
The collapse of France,
in less than eight weeks of active fighting, shook the entire world. The
government‑by then functioning in the city of Vichy‑became
a haven for collaborationists; and under the guidance of Pierre Laval, vice‑premier
in the Petain cabinet, the Republic was abolished in favor of a totalitarian
regime. In Eastern Europe, repercussions of the French
collapse were felt within a week of the armistice. With Franco-British
guarantees now proved worthless, Rumania
was literally torn asunder. Russia
demanded the annexation of Bessarabia and northern Bucovina.
Rumania
acceded, but turned to Germany
for further protection; this was to no avail. Hitler ceded most of Rumanian
Transylvania to Hungary,
and a smaller area to Bulgaria;
this was Hitler's reward to two little satellites and it served to bring them
closer into the Axis camp.
Never in the history of the
world, have a people responded so magnificently to national crisis as did the
British people in the dark days following the French debacle of June 1940. Fate
saved Britain
after Dunkirk, when Germany
made the mistake of not invading England
and concentrated instead on finishing France.
Some members of Britain's
ruling class wanted to make peace with Hitler immediately. But Britain's
common people, and their leader, Winston Churchill, would not allow it.
Three days after Dunkirk,
ammunition and equipment factories were working around the clock and thousands
rushed to take up arms. For 15 and 16 hours a day, men and women sweated over
machines, working to the point of exhaustion. Tanks and planes rolled from the
factories in an unprecedented stream. This was a miracle comparable to Dunkirk.
On June 19, just after France
asked for an armistice, the Germans struck the first major blow at Great
Britain. At first 100 planes a day dropped
their bombs on British cities. Soon it was 200 planes; before long, nearly a
thousand. Yet with ever increasing strength, Britain
struck back. Both sides were soon dropping their bombs on open cities, killing
civilians by the hundreds.
The German plan appeared to be
this: (I) Systematic bombing of British cities and military objectives to
destroy morale and the will and power to resist invasion; (2) Destruction of
the British sea lanes by bombing and submarine attack, to shut Britain off from
supplies and reinforcements from America and the Empire; (3) Destruction of the
Royal Air Force and its bases to allow a combination sea‑borne air‑borne
invasion to land on Britain, unhindered; (4) Finally, after this softening
process, actual invasion of the British Isles by parachute troops, and army
units transported in specially built barges assembled on the French, Dutch,
Belgian and Norwegian coasts.
The plan never succeeded. In the
cities, the people of Britain
buried their dead and returned to work. In the air, the RAF waged one of the
most magnificent underdog battles in history; and it won. By the end of August,
1000 German planes were hitting Britain
in a single day. All parts of England
and Wales were
raided, and many points in Scotland,
but the principal German effort was directed at London.
On August 21, no less than 200 enemy aircraft were destroyed by the RAF and for
days thereafter, similar losses were suffered by the Luftwaffe ‑ the
German air force. This broke the back of the German offensive and gradually,
the bombing attacks slackened.
The British success in warding
off an invasion of its soil can be attributed to three main factors: (1)
Although outnumbered, the British fighter planes were superior to the Germans'
in almost all technical characteristics, i.e. speed, fire power and
maneuverability; (2) The British planes were operating close to home bases;
thus, short‑range fighters could be refueled and used over and over again;
(3) Indirect American assistance in the form of planes, armaments, shipping,
manufactured goods and food.
The National Defense Act of 1920
provided for a possible return to conscription in an emergency by making it the
duty of the war department general staff to prepare plans for mobilization. The
research and planning undertaken by a joint army and navy selective‑service
committee, getting underway in 1926, were embodied in the Selective Training
and Service Act of 1940. It was the first conscription law legislated in time
of peace. The Senate voted for the bill 47 to 25 and the House 232 to 124. On
Sept. 16, Pres. Roosevelt signed it‑ and by proclamation called upon all
males from 21 through 35 years of age, residing in the U.S.
and its territories, to register on Oct. 16 for selective compulsory military
training.
The president could not induct
more men than Congress appropriated; not more than 900,000 men were to be in
training at any one time. They were to serve for 12 months, unless Congress declared
a national emergency. The Service Extension Act of August 18, 1941 changed this to 18 months. Men inducted
were not to be employed beyond the limits of the western hemisphere and the U.S.
possessions including the Philippines,
a limitation removed Dec. 1941, following entry of the United
States into the war. Amendments were now
made to the Act, specifically changing the ages for registration from 18 to 65
years of age, though only the 20 to 45 year groups were at this time eligible
for induction. Also, the act prolonged the service period to the duration of
the war plus six months.
Eventually, the Selective Service
system comprised 6,443 local boards, one for each area of about 30,000
inhabitants, and 505 appeal boards. The whole organization was run by Brig.
Gen. Lewis B. Hershey who took over the reins on July 31, 1941 and remained in that position to the end
of the war. On Oct. 20, 1940,
16,632,146 men were registered. Six subsequent registrations under the act as
amended were held in 1941 and 1942. After that men were required to register on
attaining their 18th birthday. On Sept.
30, 1941, a little more than a year after enactment of the act,
14,700,000 registrants out of a total of 17,400,000 or 85% were classified. Of
these, 77% were given deferred status, with those deferred because of
dependency forming 4/5 of all deferred at the time, and placed in Class III‑A,
and the rest placed in Class I‑A ‑ men available for military duty.
Being a married man, I was classified by my local board as III‑A.