By Victor Davis Hanson
Thursday, May 14, 2015
May 8 marked the end of World War II in Europe 70 years
ago — a horrific conflict that is still fought over by historians.
More than 60 million people perished — some 50 million of
them in Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union, and China.
The pre-war Soviet state in the 1920s and 1930s had
killed perhaps 20 million of its own citizens in purges, exiles,
collectivizations, forced famines, and show trials. Then it lost an estimated
25 million soldiers and civilians to the German army on the Eastern Front.
Hitler’s Germany by late 1942 had occupied almost 1 million square miles of
Soviet ground.
The Soviet Red Army would eventually be responsible for
three quarters of Germany’s WWII casualties, but at a cost of approximately 9
million dead of its own combatants. Nevertheless, the Allied defeat of the Axis
powers is more complicated than just the monumental and heroic sacrifice of the
Soviet soldier.
World War II started largely because the Soviet Union had
had assured Hitler that the two powers could partner up to divide Poland. With
his eastern rear thus secure, Hitler then would be free to fight a one-front
war in the West against the European democracies.
The Soviet Union only entered the war after it was
double-crossed by Hitler in June 1941. Before the surprise German invasion, the
Soviets had supplied Germany with substantial fuel, food and metals to help it
bomb Great Britain into submission. For all practical purposes, Russia had been
Nazi Germany’s most useful ally.
Duplicitous Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin at one time or
another both fought against and followed non-aggression arrangements with every
Axis power — Germany, Italy, and Japan. In contrast, the United States was the
only major power of the war that did not start fighting until it was directly
attacked.
The war in Europe was not just won with Soviet blood.
When World War II started, America was isolationist and the Soviet Union
collaborationist. After the fall of France in June 1940, Great Britain until
June 1941 alone faced down the huge Nazi Empire that ranged from the Arctic
Circle to the Sahara desert. British prime minister Winston Churchill’s
steadfast leadership, Britain’s superb air force, and its indomitable Royal
Navy ensured that even when outnumbered, isolated, and bombed, England would be
unconquerable.
Once the United States entered the war after the attack
on Pearl Harbor, the Axis cause was largely doomed. America mobilized 12
million soldiers — about the same number as did the Soviet Union, despite
having a population of about 40 million fewer citizens.
American war production proved astonishing. At the huge
Willow Run plant in Michigan, the greatest generation turned out a B-24 heavy
bomber every hour. A single shipyard could mass-produce an ocean-going Liberty
merchant ship from scratch in a week.
In just four years, the United States would produce more
airplanes than all of the major war powers combined. Germany, Japan, Italy, and
the Soviet Union could not build a successful four-engine heavy bomber.
America, in contrast, produced 34,000 excellent B-17s, B-24s, and B-29s.
By 1944, the new U.S. Navy had become the largest in the
history of civilization at more than 6,000 ships. Its B-29 heavy bomber program
and Manhattan Project efforts together cost more $50 billion in today’s
dollars.
America sent troops throughout the Pacific islands, and
to North Africa, Italy, and Western Europe. The United States staged two
simultaneous bombing campaigns against Germany and Japan while conducting
surface and submarine campaigns against all of the Axis powers.
At the same time, the U.S. supplied the Soviet Union with
400,000 heavy trucks, 2,000 locomotives, 11,000 railcars, and billions of
dollars worth of planes, tanks, food, clothing, and strategic resources. By
1943–44, the U.S. also supplied about 20 percent of Britain’s munitions.
If the measure of wartime success is defined by quickly
defeating and humiliating enemies at the least cost in blood and treasure, then
America waged a brilliant war.
Of the major powers, only America’s homeland was not
systematically bombed. It was never invaded. While its 400,000 fatalities were
a terrible cost of victory, the United States lost the smallest percentage of
its population of any major power.
By late 1944, the American M1 rifle, B-29 heavy bomber,
P-51 Mustang fighter, Gato-class submarines, Essex-class aircraft carriers, and
Iowa-class battleships were the best weapons of their class.
America did not win World War II alone. But without the
United States, the war against Axis fascism would have been lost.
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