Why the Allies Won

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Why the Allies Won Page 60

by Richard Overy


  July Plot (1944), 378–80

  Juno beach, 192, 197

  Kaga, 49, 50–1

  Kaiser, Henry J., 237

  Kammhuber, General Josef, 135–6

  Kammhuber Line, 135–6

  Kanzler, Ernest, 239

  Katyusha rocket-launcher, 93

  Kawai, Kazuo, 367

  Kazakhstan, 221

  Keitel, Field Marshal Wilhelm, 104, 339, 341, 384

  Kennan, George, 443

  Khalkin-Gol, Battle of (1939), 86

  Kharkov, 105, 118

  Kiev, 118

  King, Admiral Ernest: and invasion of Europe, 53, 174; and naval aviation, 46; Pacific strategy, 41; on Soviet Union as ally, 310; and submarine war, 59

  Kleist, Field Marshal Paul von, 81

  Kluge, Field Marshal Gunther von: and invasion of France (1944), 206, 207, 208, 212–13, 214, 217, 396; and Schlabrendorff’s attempt on Hitler, 378

  Knudson, William, 235

  Koenig, General Pierre, 183

  Koller, General Karl, 396–7

  Koltso, Operation (1943), 100–2

  Konev, Ivan, 114

  Konoye, Prince, 451

  Korean War (1950–53), 405

  Krushchev, Nikita, 312, 316

  Kuibyshev, 225

  Kursk, Battle of (1943), 106–17, 113, 260, 262, 263, 270

  Kuwuhara, Commander, 280–1

  landing craft, 170, 235

  Lang, Cosmo, Archbishop of Canterbury, 348

  Lang, Fritz, 292

  Layton, Sir William, 232–3

  Leach, Captain John, 33

  leadership, 300–46: Allied administration, 329–36; Germany, 26, 313, 336–46, 387–8, 399; relations between Allied, 300–12; role in war’s outcome, 26, 313–29, 336–41, 342–6, 387–8, 399

  League of Nations, 318

  League of the Godless, 347

  Leahy, Admiral William, 321

  Leigh, Sir Humphrey de Vere, 61

  Leigh Lights, 61, 69

  Leigh-Mallory, Air Marshal Trafford, 182

  LeMay, General Curtis, 154–5

  Lend-Lease, 262–3, 304, 308, 309, 310, 311–12

  Leningrad, siege of (1941–44), 104

  Lexington, 42, 44, 46

  Liberty Ships, 236–8

  Lichtenstein radar, 144

  Lille, 141

  Lindbergh, Charles, 241

  Lippmann, Walter, 355

  Litvinov, Maxim, 311, 352, 388–9

  Living Church, 347

  Lloyd George, David, 324, 325

  logistics, 257, 392

  London Blitz, 132–3, 294

  Loop, Albert van, 186

  Lopatin, General Alexander, 89

  Lorient, 141

  lorries, 247, 250

  Los Alamos, 296–7

  Lucy spy ring, 111

  Ludendorff, General Erich, 243–4

  Luftwaffe see German air force

  Luxembourg: German takeover (1940), 15

  MacArthur, General Douglas, 41–2

  Madagascar, Allied invasion (1942), 164–7

  magnetrons, 62

  Magnitogorsk, 227–8, 229, 232, 253

  Mahan, Admiral, 180

  Maikop, 279, 282–3

  Maisky, Ivan, 309

  Malaya, 18

  Malta, 63

  Manchuria, 10, 86

  Manhattan project, 296–7

  Mann, Thomas, 366

  Manstein, Field Marshal Erich von: and Citadel, 106, 120; and German retreat, 117, 119; on Hitler, 337; and Kharkov, 105; on reasons for Soviet win of Barbarossa, 120; and Sebastopol, 81; and Stalingrad, 99

  Mantes-Gassicourt, 215

  Manteuffel, General Hasso von, 341

  Marshall, General George C.: background and war role, 333–6, 397; on collaboration’s importance, 300, 344, 390; and invasion of France (1944), 53, 168, 169, 176; Japanophobia, 362; and Joint Chiefs-of-Staff Committee, 321; and Roosevelt, 322, 334, 336; at Teheran (1943), 301

  Masset (governor of Madagascar), 166

  material: Axis vs Allied, 2, 4–6, 222, 223; effect on war’s outcome, 399; German, 244, 245; see also oil and production, war

  Maud committee, 295

  mechanisation see tanks

  media coverage, 360–1

  Mediterranean: British strategy, 53–4, 328–9; effects of campaign on D-Day timing, 170–1; sea war, 63–4; see also Italy and North Africa

  Mellenthin, General Friedrich von, 120

  Metox, 62, 69

  Middle East, 16, 18, 20

  Midway, 40

  Midway, Battle of (1942), 18, 44–53, 49, 368, 393

  Milch, Erhard, 269, 270

  military organisation see organisation

  military technology see technology

  Model, Field Marshal Walther, 112, 214, 215, 217

  Molotov, Vyacheslav, 310, 323

  Monroe Doctrine, 35

  Montgomery, Field Marshal Bernard: background and character, 177–8; and Churchill, 329; and D-Day plans, 178, 191–2, 194, 197; and Eisenhower, 203–5, 206, 208–9; and invasion of France (1944), 198, 201, 203–4, 206, 207–9, 213, 429–30

  moral issues, 26–8, 347–85; atomic weapons, 364; bombing, 129–30, 156, 363–4; effect on war’s outcome, 398–9; hatred of Hitler and Germany, 352–7; Nuremberg Tribunal, 382–4; propaganda, 354, 357–63, 365, 368, 371, 376–7, 381; religion’s role, 347–51, 368; Soviet regime, 364–5

  morale: Axis, 26–7, 161–2, 272–3, 367–82, 384–5; effect on war’s outcome, 398–9; Soviet, 26, 82–4, 122–3, 230–2; US, 360–3, 365

  Morgan, General Frederick, 169, 171

  Morgenthau, Henry, 133, 353

  Mortain, 213

  mortars: Hedgehog, 62

  Moscow, defence of (1941), 85

  Moscow meeting (1942), 124–5

  motor-cycles, 247

  motorisation: Allied superiority, 6, 257–8; eastern front, 258, 259, 262–3, 264–6, 267–8; Pacific campaigns, 271; see also trucks

  Mountbatten, Lord Louis, 171

  Mulberry harbours, 180–1, 202

  Munich conference (1938), 14, 386, 387

  Murrow, Ed, 133

  Mussolini, Benito: assumption of office, 10; and Barbarossa, 103; and Catholic Church, 349; deposition, 26–7, 157, 368; description of the war, 21; Hitler on, 386; and outbreak of war, 367

  Nagasaki, 154, 155

  Nagumo, Admiral, 45, 48, 50

  Nauru, 40, 44

  navigation devices, 138–9, 143–4, 144–5, 146, 147

  Nelson, Donald, 236

  Neosho, 43

  Neptune, Operation, 180

  Nesov, Gregor, 227, 229

  Netherlands: East Indies interests, 16, 39; German takeover (1940), 15

  New Deal, 233, 236, 319

  Nimitz, Admiral Chester, 42, 45, 47

  Nineteen Eighty-four (Orwell), 365

  Nishina, Yoshio, 287–8

  NKVD, 83, 105, 175, 226, 358

  Norden bomb-sights, 140

  Normandy landings see France, invasion of

  North Africa: air support, 276–7; El Alamein, 20, 271; Axis logistics, 63–4; British in, 124; German oil supplies, 283; Italy in, 270–1; Montgomery in, 177; strategic importance, 279; strength of German forces, 23; technological aids, 276–7; Tobruk (1941), 123; Torch landings (1942), 53–4, 64, 124, 177

  North Korea, 404

  Northampton, 136

  Norway: Allied failed campaign (1940), 31, 131, 324–5; Allied phantom invasion (1942), 57; German takeover (1940), 15; and heavy water, 289–90; role in Allied D-Day deception, 185

  Novikov, A.A., 95, 261–2, 332

  nuclear weapons see atomic weapons

  Nuremberg, 147

  Nuremberg Tribunal, 382–4

  Oak Ridge, 296

  Oakington, 136

  Oberth, Hermann, 291–2

  Oboe navigation device, 144–5, 146

  Oboyan, 114

  Ocean Island, 40, 42, 44

  O’Connor, General, 430<
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  Office of Production Management, 235

  oil, 279–87; synthetic, 280, 281–2, 282–3, 285

  Okinawa, 52

  Okinoshima, 44

  Okita, Saburo, 405

  Olkhovatka, 112

  Omaha beach, 192, 196, 197–8

  Opel, Wilhelm, 249

  Opel company, 248, 249

  organisation: role in war’s outcome, 329–36, 391–3

  Oribi, 30

  Orel, 117, 118

  Orwell, George, 353, 365

  Oschersleben, 148

  output, industrial see production, war

  Overlord, Operation (1944) see France, invasion of

  Pacific campaigns, 17–18, 33, 39–53, 257, 271–3, 396

  Papen, Franz von, 28

  Paris, liberation of (1944), 215–16

  Patton, General George S.: character, 211; and FUSAG deception, 185–6, 193; and invasion of France (1944), 210, 211, 212, 213–14, 215, 287

  Paulus, Field Marshal Friedrich, 81, 89–90, 91, 92, 95, 97, 99, 100, 101, 102

  Pearl Harbor attack (1941), 18, 39, 305

  Peenemünde, 146, 292–5

  Pegasus bridge, 195–6

  Perkins, Frances, 319

  Persia see Iran

  Philippines, 18

  Phillips, Admiral Thomas, 33

  Pius XI, Pope, 349

  Pius XII, Pope, 350

  Ploesti, 282, 284

  Poland: German takeover (1939), 13, 14, 339, 372

  Ponyri, 112

  Porsche, Ferdinand, 248

  Port Moresby, 40, 42, 43

  Portugal, 71

  Pound, Admiral Sir Dudley, 39

  Pownall, General Henry, 28, 308

  Pravda, 83, 123

  Prince of Wales, 30–1, 32–3, 37

  production, war, 220–54; Allied bombers, 133; Allied disruption of Axis, 5–6, 130, 131, 135, 137–8, 146, 148, 149, 151–2, 153, 154, 156, 157, 159–61, 162, 251–2; British, 243, 407–8; effect on war’s outcome, 388–9; gap between potential and actual, 2, 245–52; German, 5–6, 134, 151–2, 222–3, 243–54, 269–70, 275, 292–5, 407–8; Italian, 6, 271, 275, 433–4; Japanese, 6, 154, 222, 271, 275, 407–8; pre-war, 14; Soviet, 220–32, 243, 253–4, 407–8; statistics, 407–8; US, 5, 75, 170, 222, 232–42, 253–4, 275, 397, 407–8

  Prokhorovka, 114–16

  propaganda, 354, 357–63, 365, 368, 371, 376–7, 381

  Quebec conference (1943), 171, 173

  Queen Elizabeth, 64

  Queen Mary, 64, 326

  radar: and air war, 136, 144, 145, 147; and sea war, 45, 61–2, 69

  Rader, Melvin, 357

  radio: eastern front, 260, 263; HF/DF, 69; importance, 258; in tanks, 109, 260

  radio navigation devices, 138–9, 143–4

  Raeder, Gross-admiral Erich, 35, 55, 65

  RAF see Royal Air Force

  railways: Allied destruction of German, 153; Soviet, 221, 223

  Ramsay, Admiral Sir Bertram, 180, 194

  raw materials see material; oil

  Rechlin research centre, 248

  Red Army: appearance, 299; in China, 397; effectiveness, 25, 92–3; importance to Soviet post-war power, 397; see also Barbarossa, Operation and eastern front

  Red Army units: 1st tank army, 114; 5th Guards infantry, 115; 5th Guards tank army, 114–15, 116, 260; 6th Guards army, 114; 62nd army, 88, 89, 92–3, 95, 102; 64th army, 88; 134th Guards division, 90–1, 102; St Dmitry Donskoi tank battalion, 348

  Red Orchestra, 375

  Regensburg, 148

  Reichling, Sergeant Walter, 193–4, 195

  religion: role in war, 347–51, 368–9

  Repulse, 33, 37

  resources see material; oil

  Rhinoceros tanks, 209, 210

  Ribbentrop, Joachim von, 18, 344

  Richthofen, Field Marshal Wolfram, 338

  Roberts, Captain G.H., 30

  Rochefort, Joseph, 46–7

  rocket-launchers, 93

  rocket programme, German, 291–5

  Rodimtsev, Alexander, 91

  Rokossovsky, Marshal Konstantin, 112

  Romania: and Barbarossa, 17, 23, 86, 87, 96–7, 103; deserts Axis, 20; German trade treaty with, 244; oil fields, 282, 284

  Rommel, Field Marshal Erwin: on Allied air power, 277; and Atlantic defences, 188–91; background and character, 188; and invasion of France (1944), 195, 197, 200, 201, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208; in North Africa, 123, 283

  Roosevelt, Franklin D.: 1941 pessimism, 18; and air power, 276; at Atlantic conference (1941), 30–2; background and character, 318–21, 353; and bombing, 133–4, 141–2; and Britain, 305; call for Axis unconditional surrender, 362–3; at Casablanca (1943), 142–3, 169, 363; and Churchill, 22, 32, 132, 306, 312; death, 322–3, 343–4; Germanophobia, 134, 353–4; and Hitler, 28, 352, 353, 355; Hitler’s reaction to death, 343–4; and inevitability of war, 35; and invasion of France (1944), 169, 172, 175–6, 183; on Liberty Ships, 237; and Marshall, 322, 334, 336; Pacific strategy, 41; and Pearl Harbor (1941), 39; at Quebec (1943), 172; and religion, 349; role in war’s outcome, 26, 313, 318–23; and Second Front, 310, 335; and Soviet Union, 307–9, 310, 312, 365; and Stalin, 312; at Teheran (1943), 119, 175–6, 300–3, 322; and Torch (1942), 54; on treatment of defeated German leaders, 382; and US entry into war, 304–5, 357; and US production and rearmament, 220, 233, 234, 236, 253, 397; war priorities, 311; and war’s moral issues, 349, 350, 351

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 318

  Rosenberg, Alfred, 350

  Rostov-on-Don, 81, 82–3, 100

  Rotmistrov, General Nikolai, 114–16, 260

  Rotterdam, 131

  Rouen, 140–1

  Roundup, Operation (1943), 169

  Royal Air Force (RAF): attitude to civilian bombing, 129; Churchill’s early support for, 126; close-support tactics, 276–7; see also Bomber Command

  Royal Navy: anti-submarine support groups, 69, 70; comparative strength, 33; and D-Day (1944), 179–80, 192, 194, 196, 428–9; invasion of Madagascar (1942), 164–7; losses, 74; and sea war, 35–6, 37–9, 41, 59, 63, 69, 70; ships in commission at end of war, 75

  Ruge, Friedrich, 278

  Ruhr, 130, 131, 135, 144, 162, 344

  Rumyantsev, Operation, 118

  Rundstedt, Field Marshal Gerd von, 188, 190–1, 195, 205–6

  Russian Civil War (1918–21), 77

  Russian Revolution (1917), 8

  Rutherford, Ernest, 288

  Saffody, Tom, 242

  Saigon, 281

  St Lô, 255, 275

  St Paul’s School, London, 191–2

  Saipan, 370

  Salmuth, General Hans von, 189

  Saratoga, 46

  Saudi Arabia, 20

  Saur, Karl-Otto, 423

  Schlabrendorff, Fabian von, 378

  Schweppenburg, General Geyr von, 190, 197

  Schweinfurt, air battle of (1943), 148–9

  sea war, 30–76: air support, 36–7, 60–1, 68, 69, 70, 71–2, 141, 280–1, 396; Atlantic, 30–9, 54–63, 64–73, 74, 141, 393, 396; Mediterranean, 63–4; oil transports, 280–1, 286; Pacific, 39–53; reasons for Allied success, 393; significance, 21, 22; technological aids, 37, 60–2, 69

  searchlights, marine, 61, 69

  Sebastopol, 81

  Second Front: Allied reluctance to start, 123, 124, 142, 310; bombing’s contribution to, 24–5, 125, 126; see also France, invasion of

  Second World War see World War II

  Seine river, 215

  Sergei, Metropolitan, 347, 348

  Seven Years’ War (1756–63), 344

  ships: production statistics, 407; US production, 75, 170, 235, 236–8; see also landing craft

  Shirer, William, 367

  Shoho, 43

  Shokaku, 42, 44

  Shtemenko, General Sergei, 332

  Siberia, 221–2

  Simonov, Konstantin, 354

  Singapore, 18, 33

  Singleton, Judge John, 126

  Sledgehammer, Ope
ration (1942), 169

  SN2, 144

  Solomon Islands, 42, 52

  Sorenson, Charles, 240

  Soryu, 49, 50–1

  Soviet air force, 260–2, 263

  Soviet air force units: 5th air army, 108; 8th air army, 93–5

  Soviet Union: 1944 offensive, 203; agriculture and food, 223, 229–30, 231; air power, 258, 260–2; attitude to old imperial states, 9; British relations, 107–8, 123–5, 304, 307–12, 437; effects of war on, 388, 397–8; and end of European war, 217; fighting skills, 25, 257, 391; Five-Year Plans, 225, 230; German fear of, 381; German invasion (1941–43) see Barbarossa, Operation; German–Soviet Pact (1939), 3, 14, 15, 282; heavy-bomber development, 127; invasion of Germany (1945), 344; and Japan, 86; material resources, 5; military technology, 6, 258–63, 279, 298–9; and Nuremberg, 383; oil supplies, 282, 283–4, 286–7; patriotism and morale, 26, 82–4, 122–3, 230–2; post-war, 403, 404–6; propaganda, 354, 357–60; punishment of retreaters and deserters, 358; railways, 221, 223; regime as moral issue, 364–5; religion in, 347–8; role in war’s outcome, 1–2, 3, 397–8; supplies to, 22; technical achievement, 6; US economic aid to, 309, 310, 311–12; US relations, 304, 307–12; war casualties, 120; war leadership, 313–18, 332–3; war production, 220–32, 243, 253–4, 407–8; west’s mistrust, 3–4; see also eastern front and Red Army

  Soviet War News, 365

  Spaatz, General Carl, 139, 181–2, 183

  Spain, 20

  Spanish Civil War (1936–39), 10, 86, 127

  Speer, Albert: on Allied bombing campaign, 163; and atomic research, 290; and German production, 153, 160, 250–1, 254; on Hamburg air raid, 146; and Hitler, 343; and Hitler’s death, 216; at Nuremberg, 383; and rockets, 293–4

  Spruance, Rear-Admiral Raymond ‘Electric Brain’, 46, 47, 49, 50

  SS (Schutzstaffel), 252, 372, 380

  Stagg, John, 194

  Stalin, Josef: admiration for Hitler, 312; on air power and armour, 257; and Allied bombing, 123–5, 158; and Antonov, 332–3; background and character, 314–15; and Barbarossa, 17, 23, 78, 80, 83, 84, 85, 87, 100–1, 103, 104, 105, 106–7, 111, 307, 315–17; blamed by Hitler for loss of war, 387; and Britain, 123–5, 309, 312; and Churchill, 301–3; confidence in Allied victory, 366; and end of European war, 217; and German rout, 118, 119; and heavy-bomber development, 127; hopes of Allied support, 24; and invasion of France (1944), 124–5, 164, 172, 175–6, 217–18; at Moscow meeting (1942), 124–5; and Nuremberg, 382; on old imperial states, 9; Orwell on, 450; on production’s importance, 253; and propaganda, 347–8, 357–8, 359; public popularity, 359; and religion, 347–8; role in war’s outcome, 26, 313–18; and Roosevelt, 312; and Russian Civil War (1918–21), 77–8; at Teheran (1943), 119, 175–6, 287, 300–3; and US, 309, 312; war priorities, 311; western attitude to, 352–3; on winning wars, 386; and Zhukov, 85, 86, 316

 

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