The
participants in World War II were those
nations who either participated directly in
or were affected by any of the theaters or events of
World War II.
World War II was primarily fought between two large
military alliances.
The Axis powers were a group of countries led by
Nazi Germany, the Kingdom of Italy
(however, in the final years, only its northern part, as the
Italian Social Republic) and
the Empire of
Japan
. They were considered the aggressors of the
conflict.
The Allies, led by the United Kingdom
and until its defeat, France
, were joined
in the European theatre by the Soviet Union
in June 1941 and by the United States
in December 1941. In the Asia-Pacific
theater, the Allies were led by the Republic of China
, following the 1937 invasion of China
by Japan
, and the
United States and the British Commonwealth, following the 1941-1942
Japanese
attacks.
Axis powers
Originally founded on the concept of the Rome-Berlin-axis(the
Pact of Steel) and later on, the
Tripartite Pact, the
Axis
was not primarily a formal alliance. Each of the major countries
went to war on their own initiative, (Nazi Germany in 1939, Italy
in 1940, Japan in 1937 against China and in 1941 against the United
States and the British Commonwealth) and not necessarily to assist
each other. There was little sharing of technology or resources and
little in the way of cooperative strategic planning between the
major Axis powers.
With the demise of Italy, Germany and Japan functioned as wholly
separate powers, each conducting the war in their theatre (Germany
in the
European and
Japan in the
Pacific). There were a
number of smaller powers on the side of the Axis, although for the
most part, the war effort was directed and powered by Germany and
Japan.
National impacts
The countries involved in or affected by World War II are listed,
with a brief description of their role in the conflict.
Listed alphabetically:
Albania
Andorra
Andorra
remained officially neutral for the duration of World War
II. At the beginning of the war, a small detachment of
French troops was stationed in the country which was left over from
the
Spanish Civil War, but these
forces were withdrawn in 1940. When France fell,
Philippe Pétain of the Vichy regime was
declared the new French
Co-prince.
After the German invasion of Vichy France in 1942, a German
military force moved to the Andorran border near Pas de la Casa
but did not cross. In response, a Spanish
force was established at La Seu d'Urgell
, but it too remained outside Andorran
territory. In 1944,
Charles de
Gaulle established a new provisional government, and assumed
the position of French Co-Prince. He ordered French forces to
occupy Andorra as a "preventative measure" to secure order.
Throughout the war, Andorra was used as a
smuggling route between Spain and Vichy France,
and an escape route for people fleeing German-occupied areas.
Argentina
During the
period of World War II, Argentina
was ruled by a series of fraudulent
conservative governments and dictatorial military juntas.
While a large majority of the Argentine economic elite was
considerably
anglophilic and wanted
Argentina to join the Allied side, neutralist feelings prevailed in
the military, which saw the war as a potential source of economic
benefit for the country, by exporting supplies and agricultural
products to both sides of the conflict. The government of
Edelmiro Julián Farrell
eventually caved in to international pressure, and Argentina joined
other Latin American countries and declared war on Germany and
Japan, but by this time the war was all but over (March 27,
1945).
It is worth noting that many citizens opposed the nation's official
neutralist stance. Over 750 Argentine volunteers fought in the
British, South African and Canadian Air Forces, mainly in the
164 Argentine-British RAF
squadron, which saw action in Northern France and Belgium.
Nearly 4,000 Argentine volunteers fought on the Allied side.
Armenia
During
World War II, Armenia
was
part of the Soviet
Union
as the Armenian Soviet Socialist
Republic. Over five hundred thousand Armenians fought
for the Soviet army, and half of them fell in battles. Five
Armenian infantry divisions were formed. Armenia gave 4 marshals
and 60 generals. The Armenian Church and overseas Armenians donated
large sums of money.
After the war, the Armenian and Georgian
Republics laid territorial claims to Turkey
.
However, the Soviet government was not willing to return the
lands
Some captured Armenians, who had lived under the terror of Joseph
Stalin and sought to topple the authoritarian structure of the
Soviet Union, chose to fight for the Axis. They fought in the
following units:
Australia
Australia was among the
first countries to declare war on Germany, on September 3, 1939.
More than one million Australian men served in the war out of a
total population of around seven million. Although it was
ill-prepared for war, the Australian government had soon dispatched
Royal Australian Air
Force squadrons and personnel to serve with the
Royal Air Force. The
Royal Australian Navy (RAN) commenced
operations against Italy after its entry into the war in June 1940.
Later that year the
Australian Army
entered campaigns against Italy and Germany in
North Africa and Europe. German
submarines and
raiding
ships operated in Australian waters throughout the war. The
most intensive and numerically largest part of Australia's war
effort came after the outbreak of hostilities with Japan in late
1941.
The
Australian mainland came under direct attack for the first time in
1942, when Japanese
aircraft launched a major bombing attack on Darwin
in February, and attacked many other
towns in northern Australia. Axis
covert raiding ships and submarines
struck at
shipping and shore targets around Australia, including a
submarine attack on Sydney
Harbour.
For the
remainder of the war, the Australian war effort was concentrated in
south-east Asia and the South West Pacific Area: they were
involved from January 1942 in Malaya,
the Dutch East
Indies
and the Australian territory of New Guinea
. Before the bulk of the Australian Army had
returned from overseas, from July onwards a small number of
Militia troops fought a
stubborn rearguard action in the trying conditions of the
Kokoda Track. In August 1942, at the
Battle of Milne Bay, Australian
infantry became the first Allied soldiers to defeat Japanese ground
forces during the war. The bitter and deadly
New Guinea campaign came to occupy the
attention of most of the Australian armed forces until 1945. Later
that year, as the war drew to a close, Australian forces led the
campaign to retake
Borneo.
Austria
Austria
became a full part of Nazi Germany in 1938
among popular acclaim during the Anschluss. After the defeat of the Axis
Powers, the Allies occupied Austria in four occupation zones set up
at the end of World War II until 1955, when the country again
became a fully-independent republic under the condition that it
remained neutral.
The four occupations zones were French,
American, British, and Soviet, with Vienna
also divided
among the four powers. This paralleled the situation in
post-war Germany.
Azerbaijan
During
World War II, Azerbaijan
was part of the Soviet Union
as the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist
Republic. The capital of Azerbaijan, Baku
ranked as
one of the largest centres for the production of oil industry
equipment before World War II. The World War II
Battle of
Stalingrad
was fought to determine who would have control of
the Baku oil fields. Fifty years before the battle, Baku
produced half of the world's oil supply: Azerbaijan and the United
States are the only two countries ever to have been the world's
majority oil producer.
By the end of 1941, thousands of Azeris had joined the People's
Voluntary Corps. Mobilization affected all spheres of life,
particularly the oil industries. A week after fighting began, the
oil workers themselves took the initiative to extend their work to
12-hour shifts, with no days off, no holidays, and no vacations
until the end of the war.
Meanwhile in September 1942 Hitler's generals presented him with a large
decorated cake which depicted the Caspian Sea
and Baku. Baku then became the primary
strategic goal of Hitler's 1942 Fall Blau offensive. This offensive
was unsuccessful, however.
The German army was at first stalled in the
mountains of Caucasus, then decisively
defeated at the Battle of Stalingrad
and forced to retreat from the area, abandoning all
hopes for Reichskommisariat Kaukasus. In 1942 Azerbaijan
also became the second largest
tea producer of
the
Soviet Army. By the Decree of the
Supreme Soviet of the
USSR in February 1942, the commitment of more than 500 workers
and employees of the oil industry of Azerbaijan was awarded orders
and medals. Many Azerbaijanis fought well in the ranks of the
Soviet Army (about 600,000–800,000) and Azeri Major-General
Azi Aslanov was awarded twice Hero of
the Soviet Union. About 400,000 Azeris died in World War II.
Like the Armenians, Georgians and other peoples of the Caucasus who
were upset with Soviet rule, some Azerbaijanis joined the side of
Germany. These units included:
Bahrain
The
Sheikh of Bahrain
declared war on Germany on September 10,
1939. Significant Bahraini Units included the First Cavalry
led by General Benjamin Segal and the Second Infantry led by
General Aaron Landberg.Bahraini forces fought under British command
in the Middle East theater.
Belarus
Belgium
Like the
Netherlands, Belgium
declared its neutrality in an effort to
avoid being caught in another war between Germany and
France. Germany, however, did not respect Belgium's
neutrality and marched through Belgium as part of the invasion of
France in 1940. Thus, Belgium joined the Allies and maintained a
government-in-exile with control over its
colonial possessions until the
country was liberated in 1944.
Bolivia
Bolivia
was one of many Latin American countries
to declare war on Germany later on in the war, joining the Allies
on April 7, 1943. It was the only country to declare war in
1943. Shortly after war was declared, the
President of Bolivia,
Enrique Peñaranda, was overthrown in
a coup. The new ruler,
Gualberto
Villarroel, had
fascist and
anti-Semitic leanings, but foreign pressure
compelled Villarroel to remain at war and to purge the more extreme
Nazi sympathizers from among his supporters. Bolivian mines were a
supplier of the war material,
tin, to the
Allies. Bolivia has no coastline and it did not send any troops or
warplanes overseas.
Brazil
Brazil
was
under the dictatorship of Getúlio
Vargas and maintained its neutrality until August 1942.
There
were several German submarine attacks against Brazilian ships
between February and August that year in the Atlantic
Ocean
reaching 1,079 casualties. In response, the
Brazilian government, pressured by a population sided with the
Allies, declared war against Germany and Italy on August 22,
1942.
Brazilian naval forces helped to patrol the South and Central
Atlantic Oceans, combating Germany's U-boats and commerce raiders.
Northeastern Brazil hosted at Natal
the largest single American air base outside of its
own territory, and at Recife
, the
U.S. Fourth Fleet.
This air base gave support to the North
Africa campaign, and a route for USAAF
airplanes to fly to India
and China
to fight the
Japanese
.
In 1944, Brazil sent the 25,000-man
Brazilian Expeditionary
Force to fight in Europe, thus becoming the only Latin American
nation to send troops overseas. This force joined the
U.S. Fifth
Army under American general
Mark
Clark in Italy, and it participated in the
Italian campaign until the
end of war. Brazil also sent two
Brazilian Air Force groups (one of them
a fighter group) to Italy, becoming the only South American country
to send any air force unit overseas.
Bulgaria
Bulgaria
was a minor German ally, signing the
Tripartite Pact on March 1, 1941,
their main contribution being transit rights for German units
involved against Yugoslavia and Greece. Bulgaria occupied
portions of Greece and Yugoslavia to recreate the 19th century
boundaries of
Greater Bulgaria, but
it did not participate in the
Invasion of the Soviet Union.
After the Communist-dominated coup d'état of September 9, 1944 and
the simultaneous arrival of Soviet troops in the country, the
Bulgarian government declared war on Germany. Four Bulgarian armies
attacked the German positions in Yugoslavia.
An armistice was signed with the Allies in Moscow
on October
28, 1944. After the Nazis fled Yugoslav territory, the 1st
Bulgarian Army continued its offensive in Hungary and Austria under
the command of Major Georgi Marinov Mandjev from the village of
Goliamo Sharkovo (Elhovsko). It withstood the Wehrmacht offensive
on the
Drava River.
Bulgaria's
participation in World War II ended when its soldiers met British
troops in Klagenfurt
, Austria
, in May 1945.
Canada
- At the time of World War II, Newfoundland, including Labrador, was not part of Canada. See
separate Newfoundland
section.
Within
days of the invasion of Poland, Canada
declared war on Germany on September 10, 1939. As in
World War I, Canadian formations fought
under British theater command, and they played an important role in
the Allied campaigns in Europe.
Canadian forces contributed heavily with the
Royal Canadian Air Force
(RCAF) in the Battle of Britain,
in the air raids against Germany, by the Royal Canadian Navy in the Battle of the
Atlantic, by the army in the Italian campaign, the
Raid on Dieppe, the Invasion of
Normandy
(including the landing on Juno Beach
on D-Day), and
the Scheldt.
The
Canadian Army in Europe after Normandy
fought its way up through coastal France, into
western Belgium
, overrunning many German V-1 and
V-2 bases, and then into southern and eastern
Netherlands
. The Canadian Army received the surrender of
all German forces in The Netherlands
in May 1945. In Italy, a
Corps was fielded beginning in January 1944, and the
Canadian Army in Normandy built up from a single division in June
1944, to a full Corps in July 1944, and next, to a field
Army in August 1944, under which several foreign
national formations were under its command, including at various
times British, Polish, Dutch, and American forces. The Canadian
Army in western Europe was a part of the British
21st Army Group under
Field Marshall Bernard
L. Montgomery.
In March 1945, both I and II Canadian Corps came under command of
the
First Canadian Army in
Belgium and The Netherlands.
From 1941, Canadian forces had also
participated in the defense of British territories against Japanese
forces, especially Hong
Kong
where an understrength brigade had been deployed
before the war broke out in the Pacific
, and it was ultimately destroyed/captured.
As the war in Europe wound down, from late 1944, many
Royal Canadian Navy ships and personnel
were transferred from the Atlantic to join the
British Pacific Fleet. About one
million Canadians served in uniform during World War II.
Over 167,000 aircrew were trained in Canada through the
British Commonwealth Air
Training Plan, a program which served to train aircrews for the
various air forces of British Commonwealth nations.
Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
Ceylon
(later known as Sri
Lanka
), was a British colony and a major Allied
naval base. On April 5, 1942 over 300 aircraft from Japanese
carriers
bombed the island.
Winston Churchill called it "the
most dangerous moment" of World War II, because the Japanese wished
to replicate a grander success of the attack at Pearl Harbor.
The
British ships, however, were moved to Addu
Atoll, Maldives
Islands, 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) southwest of
Ceylon. Nevertheless, the British
lost an
aircraft carrier, two cruisers, and two destroyers, while the Royal Air Force squadrons on Ceylon suffered
severe losses. The British fleet retreated to
East Africa until 1944.
The
Ceylon Garrison Artillery
Regiment was stationed on Horsburgh Island in the Cocos
Islands
, to defend it from Japanese attack. However,
following agitation by the
Lanka
Sama Samaja Party,
the regiment
mutinied on the night of 8 May 1942, intending to hand the
islands over to the Japanese. The mutiny was suppressed and three
of the Ceylonese soldiers became the only British Commonwealth
troops to be executed for mutiny during World War II.
Bombardier Gratien Fernando, the leader of the mutiny,
was defiant to the end.
Following the Cocos Islands Mutiny, no Ceylonese combat unit was
deployed in a front-line combat situation, although Supply &
Transport Corps troops were used in rear areas in the Middle East.
The defences of Sri Lanka were beefed up to three Allied army
divisions because the island was strategically important, as a
producer of
rubber. Rationing was instituted
so that Sri Lankans were comparatively better fed than their Indian
neighbours, in order to prevent disaffection among the ordinary
people.
Sri Lankans in Japanese-occupied Malaya and Singapore were
recruited by the Japanese for the
Lanka
Regiment of the
Indian National
Army, to fight against the Allies. While there was a plan to
land them in Sri Lanka to start a guerrilla war, they never
actually saw action.
Chile
Initially, Chile
chose to remain neutral in the war, having close trading links with
Germany. Later in the war, however, Chile distanced itself
from the Axis powers, and the Chilean government took steps to
dismiss pro-German military officers. Relations with Axis countries
were broken in 1943, and in 1945, Chile declared war on Japan.
As with
Argentina
, by this time the war was almost over.
China
The
Republic of
China
had been fighting Japan intermittently
since the 1931 Mukden Incident, when
Japan annexed Manchuria.
On July
7, 1937, the Marco Polo Bridge Incident
led the two countries to full-scale war.
Already
engaged in war with Japan,
as well as enduring a civil conflict between the Kuomintang (KMT, Chinese Nationalist Party) and
the Communist Party of
China, the Chinese
Nationalist Government
's full attention was within its borders in
resisting the Japanese
during the war. However,
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek still
managed to send troops to Britain's aid in Burma
, in early
1942. China
's
participation in the war was also pivotal in a sense that more than
1.5 million Japanese military personnel were sent to China and
bogged down. Japanese casualties in China are estimated at
1.1-1.9 million.
While China had rather warm relations with Germany (see
Sino-German cooperation), following
the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, China formally joined the
Allies and declared war on Germany on December 9, 1941.
Many of China's urban centers, industrial resources, and coastal
regions were occupied by Japan for most of the war. China suffered
a large death toll from the war, both military and civilian. The
Chinese Nationalist army suffered some 3.2 million casualties, and
17 million civilians died in the crossfire. After the war, China
became one of the main victorious countries and gained one of the
permanent seats in the
United Nations Security
Council.
After the war ended, the
Chinese Civil
War resumed between the Nationalists and the Communists. The
Nationalist government, with its military strength greatly reduced
and its economy devastated by the war against Japan, was defeated
by the Communists in 1949. The Republic of China retreated to
Taiwan while the communist People's Republic of China was
established on the mainland.
Colombia
After the
attack on Pearl
Harbor
, Colombia
broke diplomatic relations with the
Axis powers. Colombia provided
the Allies with
petroleum products.
Then, in
1943, the German submarine U-505
destroyed a Colombian schooner, which caused Colombia to declare a
"status of belligerency" against Germany
on November 26. The German
ambassador left the country, and measures
of control were implemented, including internment of German
citizens in designated areas. Photographs and reconnaissance
airplanes belonging to the Colombian-German company
Scadta, which used to take aerial shots of Colombian
and German cities, were also handed to the United States. During
the recovery years, Colombia sent
Nestle
products (coffee, baby food, etc.) and carbon for heating all over
Europe.
Costa Rica
Costa Rica
joined the Allies on December 8,
1941. The leftist administration of President
Rafael Ángel Calderón
Guardia was hostile to Nazism and introduced numerous measures
to decrease German influence in the country. Costa Rica declared
war on Japan the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and on
Germany and Italy shortly afterwards. It allowed the United States
to establish an airfield on
Cocos
Island.
Croatia
The
Independent State of Croatia
(Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, or NDH) became
a member of the Axis on 10 April 1941 and joined the Tripartite
Pact on June 15, 1941. The state was technically a monarchy
and Italian
protectorate until the
Italian capitulation on September 8, 1943, but was controlled by
the governing fascist
Ustaše movement.
It's military fought along side Axis troops; for a time on the
Eastern Front and in and around Croatia. It's most substantial
contribution was the
Air Force of the
Independent State of Croatia. The Croatian Army would fight to
the bitter end, and remained engaged in battle a week after the
capitulation of Germany on May 8, 1945.
Cuba
Cuba
joined the Allies on December 8, 1941, when it declared war on
Japan. On
December 11, it also
declared war on Germany and Italy.
The United States naval station at
Guantanamo
Bay
served as an important base for protecting
Allied shipping in the Caribbean, and on May 15, 1943, a Cuban
warship sank a German
submarine
in waters near Havana
.
Cuba began to plan a
conscription
program in order to contribute troops, but this had not
materialized by the end of the war.
Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia
was dismembered by Nazi
Germany, starting with Neville
Chamberlain's Munich Agreement
with Hitler in 1938 and the German–Italian Vienna Awards. The Czech part (western)
of the country became the so-called
Protectorate of Bohemia and
Moravia under so-called State-President
Emil Hácha, the newly separated
Slovak Republic, a
Nazi-dependent
puppet regime, led by
Roman Catholic priest
Jozef Tiso was
ultimately inserted in Slovakia. Part of southern Slovakia as well
as the complete Ruthenia (the former most eastern part of
Czechoslovakia) was annexed by Hungary.
Zaolzie was annexed by Poland, only to be snatched
from them by the Germans 11 months later. In 1945 the victorious
Soviet Union returned Zaolzie to Czechoslovakia. From 1940, a
government-in-exile in London under former Czechoslovak
President
Edvard Beneš was
recognized as an Allied power. The
Slovak National Uprising, commenced
in August 1944, was suppressed by German forces at the end of
October; partisans, however, continued fighting in the mountains
till the end of the war.
In April 1945, the Red
Army defeated the Germans and ousted Tiso's government,
annexing Carpathia
Ruthenia
to the USSR.
Denmark
Denmark
remained neutral from the outbreak of the
war. It was invaded and
occupied by Germany on April 9, 1940,
as part of
Operation
Weserübung, surrendering after a few hours of fighting and
never declaring war on the Germans.
The Danish government remained in office
in Copenhagen
until 1943 and signed the Anti-Comintern Pact. On August
29, 1943, the government handed in its resignation to the
King as a response to German demands
for more concessions. Each
Permanent
Secretary took control of his own
ministry. On May 10, 1940,
the British
occupied Iceland.
Shortly before they had
occupied
the Faroe Islands.
The United States occupied Greenland
, a position later supported by the Danish envoy in Washington
, Henrik
Kauffmann. Iceland, which was later transferred from
British to American control, declared its
independence in 1944. On May 4, 1945, the
German forces in Denmark surrendered to the British army.
Since the
German commander on Bornholm
refused to surrender to the Soviet Union, two local
towns were bombed and the garrison forced to surrender.
Bornholm remained under Soviet control until 1946.
Dominican Republic
The
Dominican
Republic
declared war on Germany and Japan
following the attacks of Pearl Harbor and the Nazi declaration of
war on the U.S. However, it did not contribute with troops,
aircraft, or ships.
Ecuador
Ecuador
was one of several South American nations
to join the Allies late in the war (joined against Germany on
February 2, 1945). Ecuador let the U.S. use Baltra Island
for a naval base.
Egypt
Egypt
had become fully independent in 1936, but British troops remained
to protect the Suez
Canal
, and a treaty provision allowed British troops to
use the country as a military base in time of war. Egypt was
seen by both the Axis and the Allies as a vital strategic point,
because of access to the Suez Canal. The Egyptian government
remained officially neutral during the war, but
King Farouk allowed British troops to use
Egypt as a base of operations and placed his Navy at the disposal
of the British. Initially Egypt was targeted by Italy, but after a
heavy defeat by the British forces under the command of
General Wavell, the
Germans were compelled to enter the fray with a division under the
command of General
Erwin Rommel.
Rommel's
successes in the deserts of Libya and west Egypt, and the fact that
they came to within 160 kilometres (100 mi) of Cairo
, gave the
Allied forces (in particular the British) a major fright.
The revolutionary officers that eventually came to power in 1952
(led by
Colonel Abdel Nasser) had
plotted to support the Germans in their push for Cairo, seeing a
German victory as an opportunity to liberate Egypt from the British
colonial occupation.
El Salvador
From 1931
to 1944, El
Salvador
was ruled by Maximiliano
Hernandez Martinez, an admirer of Hitler and Mussolini.
Nonetheless, the dictator declared war on both Japan (December 8,
1941) and Germany (December 12, 1941) shortly after the attack on
Pearl Harbor, for economic reasons. El Salvador's economy depended
heavily on the United States. Hernandez removed Germans from the
government and interned Japanese, German, and Italian nationals.
The
Second World War made Salvadorans weary of their dictatorship, and
a general national strike in 1944 forced Hernandez to resign and
flee to Guatemala
.
Estonia
The
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact
between Germany and the Soviet Union left Estonia
in the Soviet sphere of interest.
The Soviet Union threatened Estonia with war if Estonia did not
agree with the mutual assistance pact, which required allowing the
Soviet Union to build military bases into Estonia. Estonian
government, convinced that winning a war against the Soviet Union
was impossible, agreed on September 28, 1939. The Soviets conducted
a
coup d'état with support of the
Red Army in June 1940, and a sham election was held under Soviet
control.
The new government took office and the
Estonian Soviet Socialist
Republic
was proclaimed on July 2, 1940. The
puppet state was formally accepted into the
Soviet Union on
August 6. Estonia was
occupied by Germany in
1941 after war broke out between Germany and the Soviet Union.
With the
return of
the Soviet Armed Forces
,
70,000 Estonians joined the German side to fight the
Soviets. The
National
Committee failed
to restore the national government in September 1944 due to the
Soviet
reoccupation. Estonia remained occupied by the USSR until
1991.
England
Ethiopia
At the
outbreak of the war, Emperor Haile Selassie of
Ethiopia
was in exile in England trying in vain to
obtain Allied support for his nation’s cause. The Ethiopian Patriots Movement had
begun its guerilla war against the
occupying Italian forces the day Addis Ababa
fell in May 1936.
Upon the emperor's flight into exile, remnants of Ethiopia's
disbanded imperial army had transformed into guerilla units. Urban
city residents throughout the country formed underground movements
to aid the Patriots as the overall population led a passive
resistance campaign aimed at stifling Mussolini's economic agenda
for the region. As a result, the Italians were never able to
successfully occupy and secure the entire country including the
emperor's relocated capital at Gore in the southwest. Throughout
the occupation and into the beginning of the Second World War, the
constant harassment of Italian columns and communication and supply
lines reduced their fighting capabilities and their morale.
A state
of paranoia among Italian troops and civilians alike had sunk in as
they became increasingly isolated from Rome
.
Fascist retaliation to Patriot attacks were brutal and often
targeted the civilian population, which only further filled the
ranks of the Patriots creating a cycle that led to the eventual
demise of Mussolini’s
Italian East
Africa.
Britain’s declaration of war against Italy reinvigorated the
Patriot movement and paved the way for the final ousting of the
Italians in Ethiopia and in the
Horn of
Africa. The Allied liberation campaign of Ethiopia began in the
winter of 1940.
Emperor
Haile Selassie, with the support and cooperation of the
British, was transported to the Sudan to work alongside Major
Orde Wingate to organize and lead the
main Ethiopian Patriot divisions that had fled fascist-controlled
Ethiopia upon news of Britain’s declaration of war.
The
East African
Campaign was conducted by a largely multi-African force and
consisted of Ethiopian, Eritrean
, British, Sudanese
, Kenyan
, Rhodesian, South
African, Indian, Nigerian
, Ghanaian
and Free French
Forces. Within months, the liberation of Ethiopia was
achieved, and on May 5, 1941, five years to the day that the
Emperor fled his capital, Haile Selassie was restored to his
throne. The defeat of fascists in Ethiopia marked the first victory
for the Allies in the Second World War and allowed for the
remaining forces to be quickly moved up to Egypt to confront the
Axis advance towards Cairo.
Fiji
Fiji
was a British colony during World War II. The
Fiji Defence Force served with
New Zealand Army formations, under the
Allied
Pacific Ocean Areas
command.
Finland
Finland
was left to the Soviet sphere of interest
in Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact,
and when it refused to allow the Soviet Union to build bases on its
territory, it was attacked by Soviet forces in the Winter War (30 November 1939 - 13 March
1940). After this war, Finland unsuccessfully
sought protection from the United Kingdom
and from Sweden
. It
should be noted that at the end of 1939, the population of Russia
was 164 million and the population of Finland just 3.8 million.
Next, Finland pursued better relations with Nazi Germany to counter
the continued Soviet aggression. This produced cooperation between
the countries, which led to a Soviet
pre-emptive air attack on Finland after
the start of
Operation
Barbarossa, thus beginning the
Continuation War (25 June 1941 - 4
September 1944), where Finland was a
co-belligerent of Nazi Germany. The United
Kingdom and Canada declared war on Finland on 6 December 1941, but
the United States never did. To secure military support needed to
stop the
Vyborg–Petrozavodsk
Offensive coordinated with
D-Day, the
Ryti-Ribbentrop Agreement was
signed on 26 June 1944, in which Finland and Nazi Germany became
active allies. An armistice was signed after the Soviet offensive
was stopped and the Wehrmacht was retreating from the
Baltic states. The treaty required Finland to
expel all German troops, which led to the
Lapland War (15 September 1944 - 25 April 1945).
This was shortly before the complete surrender of Nazi forces all
over Europe on 7 - 8 May 1945
V-E Day.
Complete peace with the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union was
concluded in the
Paris Peace
Treaties, 1947.
France
France
was
one of the original guarantors of Polish security and as such was
one of the first countries to declare war on Germany. In
1940, following the
Battle of
France, the French government signed an armistice with Germany,
leading to the foundation of
Vichy
France and
Free French Forces
in exile. The leader of the Free French, Charles De Gaulle, took
control of France in 1944 and the country ended the war as an
ally.
Free French Forces
The Free French Forces of the
French National Committee, a
London-based exile group led by
Charles de Gaulle, were formed in 1940 to
maintain the French commitment to the Allies and liberate French
territory occupied by Germany. Together with the
French Resistance, they played a part in
the
Mediterranean
Theatre and the
liberation of western
Europe, including France in
1944. By 1943,
free France had a vast land (but no war industry, it remained
dependent on US aid) and then changed its name into fighting France
(which regrouped the Free French, the Vichy authority that joined
it and the interior resistance) with a sort of government, the CFLN
which officially became French government in June 1944 and took
control of France in August and September 1944.
In 1944, the FFF soldiers were about 560,000. In 1945, more than
1,300,000. The Resistance (forces of the interior), according to D.
E. Eisenhower, played a role equal to 15 fighting divisions. The
FFF and Resistance played a major role during the liberation of
France. The first ally unit on the Rhine was a free French unit,
the RICM.
Vichy France
When France signed armistice agreements with Germany and Italy, the
country was split into two parts, an occupied sector and an
unoccupied sector. The government was located in unoccupied Vichy,
and became known as the Vichy regime. The Vichy regime was led by
Marshal
Philippe Pétain. Vichy
France remained officially neutral during the conflict but helped
Germany as a puppet state. Prime Minister
Pierre Laval repeatedly sought France's entry
into the war on the Axis side, but was vetoed by Pétain.
On
several occasions Vichy forces were attacked by the Allies during
the war, most notably in the invasion of Syria in 1941, during
landings in
French North Africa
in
November 1942 and the Madagascar
campaign of 1942. In the fall of 1942 the Germans occupied all
of continental France but allowed the Vichy government to continue
operating as a result of Vichy North Africa violating the terms of
the 1940 armistice by calling a cease-fire following Operation
Torch
. Vichy North Africa's government and
military joined the Allies and de Gaulle afterward. Laval was
executed for
high treason after the
war.
Georgia
Reaching
the Azerbaijan
oilfields became one of the main objectives of
Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union. But the armies of the
Axis powers never got as far as the
Georgian Soviet Socialist
Republic (Georgian SSR). The Georgian SSR contributed
almost 700,000 fighters (about 20% of the total 3.2-3.4 million
citizens mobilized), out of which 79,500-170,000 were killed. It
was also a vital source of textiles and munitions.
Some captured Georgians and emigrants chose to fight for the Axis.
They fought in the following units:
- Georgische Legion (Georgian volunteers but also included
volunteers from other peoples of the region)
- Freiwilligen-Stamm-Regiment 1 (Georgians volunteers)
- SS-Waffengruppe Georgien (Georgian volunteers)
- I. Sonderverband Bergmann
Battalion (Georgian volunteers)
One Georgian battalion in the Netherlands (822nd Infantry
Battalion) staged what has sometimes been described as Europe's
last battle of World War II. This event was the
Georgian Uprising of Texel.
Germany
Nazi Germany, led by
Adolf Hitler, was the primary Axis
Power in the European Theatre. The surrender of the German forces
between May 4 and May 8, 1945 signaled the end of the war in
Europe. Even after losing two World Wars, Germany has rebuilt its
economy and prestige through the "
Wirtschaftswunder" movement in the 1950s
and reunification in 1990.
Gibraltar
The
British overseas
territory of Gibraltar
has been a British fortress and bulwark
for over 300 years. From the first days of World War II, the
Rock
became a pivot of the Mediterranean, Operation
Torch
, the invasion of North Africa, was coordinated from
the Rock.
Operation Tracer, a top-secret mission in which six men were to
be buried alive inside the Rock of Gibraltar
so that they could monitor enemy movements if the
Rock was captured.
Greece
Greece
dealt the first victory for the Allies by resisting the Italian invasion on 28 October 1940 and
pushing Mussolini's forces back into Albania. Hitler was
reluctantly forced to send forces to bail out his ally and subdue
Greece (
Operation Marita). The
resulting
Battle of Greece in April
1941 may have delayed the
invasion
of the Soviet Union by six weeks, and the heavy losses of the
German
Fallschirmjäger
over
Crete effectively put a halt to
large-scale German airborne operations for the remainder of the
war.
The country was
occupied by
Germany, Italy and Bulgaria, while the government and the King
fled the country to Egypt,
from where they continued to fight alongside the Allies. Inside the
occupied country, the Axis installed a series of puppet
governments, which commanded little allegiance from the population
and had little real authority. A vigorous
Resistance movement developed from 1942 on,
dominated largely by the leftist
National Liberation Front
(EAM). Throughout 1943, the guerrillas succeeded in liberating much
of the country's mountainous interior, establishing a free zone
called "Free Greece". After the Italian capitulation in September
1943, the Germans took over the Italian zone, often accompanied by
bloodshed and atrocities, as the Italians tried to resist (as in
Cephallonia), or as
the Allies tried to occupy Italian-held areas (the
Dodecanese Campaign). As the tide of the
war turned, and Liberation approached, the Resistance became
divided along political lines, and a mini civil war ensued between
EAM, rightist resistance groups and the collaborationist
government's
Security
Battalions. An agreement establishing a
national unity government was
reached in the May 1944
Lebanon
conference, which eased tension somewhat in the final months of
the Occupation.
With the advance of the
Red Army through
Eastern Europe in summer 1944, the German forces withdrew from the
Greek mainland in October-November 1944, although garrisons were
left behind in many islands, including Crete, where the German
forces surrendered after the unconditional surrender on 8 May 1945.
The returning government in exile, backed by British forces, soon
clashed with EAM forces in Athens,
in the first episode of the
Greek Civil
War; a conflict that would last until 1949 and leave a divisive
legacy in Greek politics and society until the 1970s.
Guatemala
Guatemala
initially stayed out of World War II, with
President Jorge Ubico declaring the
country's neutrality on September 4, 1941. This
pronouncement was reinforced on
September
9 with another declaration. Ubico implemented strong
prohibitions on Nazi propaganda in Guatemala, which had one of
Latin America's largest German immigrant populations. Later,
Guatemala moved into the Allied camp — on December 9, 1941, it
declared war on Japan, and three days later, it declared war on
Germany and Italy.
Haiti
Haiti
remained neutral in World War II until the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
declaring war on Japan the day after the attack, and on Germany and
Italy shortly afterwards. Haiti gave food supplies to Allied
forces and hosted a detachment of the
United States Coast Guard but did
not contribute troops. The
President
of Haiti,
Élie Lescot,
introduced several unpopular emergency measures during the war,
which critics claimed were designed to increase his power. Lescot
was deposed the year after the war ended.
Honduras
Honduras
was initially neutral in the war but
joined the Allied side after the attack on Pearl Harbor. It
declared war on Japan on December 8, 1941, and on Germany and Italy
on
December 13. It contributed food and
raw materials to the Allied war effort but did not send
troops.
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
was under the jurisdiction of the British
but came under the control of the Japanese after the gruelling
Battle of Hong Kong drew to a
close on Christmas Day of 1941. The
city was liberated in 1945.
Hungary
Hungary
was a significant German ally. It
signed the
Tripartite Pact on
November 20, 1940, and joined in the invasion of the Soviet Union
the next year. When, in 1944, the government of Regent
Miklós Horthy wished to sign a ceasefire
with the Allies, he was overthrown by the Nazis and replaced by a
government run by the fascist
Arrow
Cross movement, which ruled the country until it was overrun by
the Soviets.
Iceland
Iceland
was a free state at the outbreak of war in
personal union with the King of
Denmark acting as head of state. After the invasion of
Denmark by German forces, Iceland lost all contact with the King.
Following this, British forces invaded neutral Iceland on 10 May
1940, primarily to deny Germany the same option.
Though most of
Reykjavík
's modest police force was absent, preparing for a
potential German landing, a small armed force was present, but it
was ordered not to resist the British. The British proceeded
to arrest a number of German citizens, including the German
consul,
Werner Gerlach. They also seized radio and
telephone services, and blocked roads leading into Reykjavík,
effectively isolating the city from the rest of the country. The
Icelandic government formally protested the occupation, on the
grounds of Icelandic neutrality and national sovereignty, but it
provided the British with
de facto cooperation.
During the height of the occupation, 25,000 British soldiers were
stationed in Iceland, compared to roughly 40,000 inhabitants of
Reykjavík.
On 7 July 1941, control of Iceland was
transferred from Britain to the United States of America
, since the British troops were required
elsewhere. The United States was not at war with anyone, but
it had established a defense zone and
Neutrality patrols in the Western
Atlantic. Iceland needed to be denied to the Germans, and it
provided valuable air and shipping bases to the American Air Force,
Navy, and Merchant Marine.
Iceland experienced an economic boom during the occupation, since
many Icelanders took jobs working for the foreigners, and some say
that
bretavinnan (roughly, the British Jobs) provided some
of the successes of the post-war Icelandic economy. On 17 June
1944, with American encouragement, Iceland became a permanently
independent republic, and it cut all ties with Denmark. Despite
being occupied by Allied forces starting in 1940, Iceland remained
officially neutral throughout the duration of the Second World War.
Iceland did provide important air bases and naval facilities to the
Allies.
Icelandic air bases such as at Keflavík
were important to the Allied fight against the
German U-boats in the Battle of the
Atlantic. With its small population, Iceland was in no
position to raise any armed forces.
The close
cooperation between the Americans and the Icelanders led to
Iceland's giving up a position of neutrality and becoming a charter
member of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization
(NATO) in 1949. Iceland has not had
any armed forces, but its contribution was bases for its allies:
the American Air Force Base and Naval Air Station at Keflavík
. Iceland was also a vital link in the
SOSUS anti-submarine network.
India
The
British Raj
(including the areas covered by the later Republic of India,
Pakistan and Bangladesh), controlled by Britain during the war, was
covered by Britain's declaration of war. On September 12, 1939, the
Upper House of the Central Legislature of India sent a formal
message of admiration to Poland. On the same day, the
Aga Khan placed his services at the disposal of the
Government of India.
The
5th Infantry Division
of India fought in the Sudan against the Italians before being
moved to defend Libya against the Germans. The Division was then
moved to Iraq to protect the oilfields. After this the division was
moved to the Burma front, together with eight other Indian
Divisions, and then occupied Malaya. It was finally moved to Java
to disarm the occupying Japanese garrison. The
4th Infantry Division of India
fought in North Africa, Syria, Palestine and Cyprus before being
sent into Italy.
Together with the 8th and 10th Divisions it
participated in the taking of Monte Cassino
, after which it was moved to Greece. India
also provided the Allies with assault and training bases, and
provided huge quantities of food and other materials to other
Commonwealth forces, and to people on the British
home front.
Over 6.8 million Indian citizens fought with the
Indian Army,
Royal Indian Air Force, and
Royal Indian Navy, forming the largest
army raised by voluntary enlistment. Part of India was occupied by
Japanese forces during the war, and India suffered 1.5 million
civilian casualties, as well as up to 4 million dead from famine in
the Bengal region, which was created by both the Japanese military
actions and the British administration . Over 96,000 Indian members
of the armed forces were killed or went missing in action, and
74,354 were wounded during the war. Indian personnel received 2,000
awards for gallantry, including 31
Victoria Crosses. About 40,000 Indians,
mostly POWs, fought on the side of the Japanese in the
Indian National Army, and about
1,000 more were recruited by Nazi Germany for the
Tiger Legion.
Andaman & Nicobar Islands
On March
23, 1942, Japanese forces invaded the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands
. In December 1943, the
Japanese-sponsored Free India Movement (Provisional Government of
Free India) was formed. The Andaman Islands were renamed Shaheed
Islands, and the Nicobars were renamed Swaraj Islands. Andaman
& Nicobar Islanders fought alongside the Japanese during this
time. The islands were not re-occupied by the British until October
6, 1945.
Indonesia
- See
Netherlands East Indies
Iran
During
the start of the war the Allies demanded that Iran
remove German nationals from Iran fearing they might be Nazi spies or harm the British-owned oil facilities,
but Reza Shah refused, stating that they
had nothing to do with the Nazis.
German demand for oil rose and the Allies worried that Germany
would look to neutral Iran for help. Soon the Allies questioned
themselves about Iranian neutrality and they gave Reza Shah a final
warning to remove the German workers. He refused once again. In
August 1941, the British and Soviet troops invaded Iran (
Operation Countenance) and, in
September 1941, forced
Reza Shah
Pahlavi to abdicate his throne. He was replaced by his son
Mohammad Reza Shah
Pahlavi, who was willing to fight the
Axis powers. Within months Iran entered the war
on the side of the Allies and became known as "The Bridge of
Victory".
Iran's geographical position was also important to the Allies.
It
provided a 'blue water' supply route to the Soviet Union via the
port of Bandar
Abbas
and a specially constructed railway
route. The supply routes were known collectively as the
Persian Corridor. Soviet political
operatives known "
agitprops" infiltrated
Iran and helped establish the
Comintern
affiliate
Tudeh Party in early in
1942.
By January 1942, the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union agreed to
end their occupation, six months after the end of the war.
The
Soviet Union fomented revolts among the Azerbaijani and Kurdish peoples in Iran and soon formed the
People's Republic of
Azerbaijan in December 1945 and the Kurdish
People's Republic
not long after, both being run by
Soviet-controlled leaders. However, Soviet troops remained
in Iran, following the January 1946 expiration of a wartime treaty
providing for the presence of American, British and Soviet troops
in Iran during the war.
[106905]
Iraq
Iraq
was important to Britain through its position on a route to India
and the strategic oil supplies that it provided. After the
ejection of the Ottoman Turks at the end of the First World War,
these were protected by a significant Royal Air Force base at
Habbaniya and the maintenance of sympathetic governments. Because
of the United Kingdom's weakness early in the war, Iraq backed away
from its
Anglo-Iraqi Alliance with the
country. When the British High Command requested to send
reinforcements to Iraq, the country's Prime Minister, Nuri-es Said,
allowed a small British force to land. Consequently he was forced
to resign after a pro-German coup under Rashid Ali in April 1941.
Later British requests to reinforce Iraq were denied by the new
leadership.
The new regime secretly began negotiations with the Axis Powers.
The Germans quickly responded and sent military aid by Luftwaffe
aircraft to Baghdad via Syria. Indian troops consequently invaded
in mid-April 1941 and reached Baghdad and RAF Habbaniyah in May.
The Iraqi army attacked Habbaniyah but quickly capitulated and
Rashid Ali fled the country. The United Kingdom forced Iraq to
declare war on the Axis in 1942. British forces remained to protect
the vital oil supplies. British and Indian operations in Iraq
should be viewed in conjunction with events in neighbouring Syria
and Persia (Iran).
Ireland
Following
the Government of Ireland
Act, the island of Ireland was divided politically between
Ireland
(it was the Irish Free State until 1937), and Northern
Ireland
; six north-eastern Irish counties that would remain
a part of the United
Kingdom
and a participant in the U.K.
armed
forces.
At the outbreak of war, Ireland was still a member of the
British Commonwealth but chose to
remain
neutral, the only such member
state to do so.
Irish citizens were free to fill manpower shortages in Britain and
join the British armed forces. "In January 1942 it was found that
in the whole of the British Army 23,549 men were born in Ireland
and 28,287 in Northern Ireland ... [I]n 1944 the Ireland figure had
increased to 27,840 and that for Northern Ireland had reduced to
26,579."
Ireland exported desperately needed food
and labour to Britain and relaxed restrictions on the over-flying
by British warplanes over County Donegal
's airspace. The Catalina flying boat that located
the German battleship Bismarck
was based inland at Lough Erne
in County
Fermanagh. Irish airspace was used en route to the
Atlantic. "Hot-pursuit" into Irish territorial waters of German
U-boats by Royal Naval warships also
occurred. Both Allied and Axis personnel were interned from time to
time by the government of Ireland, although the Irish Government
exercised its discretion when dealing with Allied personnel - often
allowing them to "escape" - and eventually releasing them all back
to British custody by 1943. Daily weather, shipping, and aircraft
reports were also afforded the Allied side as was the breaking of
diplomatic protocol with the seizure of a radio transmitter in the
German legation.
While the British did not have access to sea and air bases that
would have helped to protect its convoy shipping in the western
approaches there was a political consensus in Ireland that
neutrality was a wise policy.
The Irish government knew that the
resources to protect their Island from air attack and/or land
invasion didn't exist, although there was strong opinion that the
Axis would not attack Ireland due to perceived Irish-American
political influence - before the Japanese Attack
on Pearl Harbor
and the German declaration of war thrust the
Americans into to World War. The war did reach the island however; a
total of some 40 Irish people were killed in Dublin
and County Carlow
in apparently accidental bombings by the Luftwaffe. Irish shipping was also a
constant target for attack by both Axis and Allies. Other
infringements of neutrality included the use of Irish territorial
waters for laying of German mines, use by German submarines
(
U-boats). All infringements were protested
vociferously by the de Valera government.
Belfast
, Northern Ireland, was also bombed (the Belfast Blitz) and the dispatch of Dublin's
fire brigades to assist in the rescue work has been lauded as an
act of solidarity since then. Ireland also suffered via
restrictions of certain strategic materials, such as coal, and in
the establishment of a
state of
emergency.
Harsh policing measures including military tribunal and
internment were employed to entirely stamp out
the activities of the IRA. Substantive contacts between the British
and Irish authorities came in the form of
Plan
W- the British reoccupation of Ireland in response to a feared
German invasion (
Case
Green).
In 1945, the
Taoiseach (Prime
Minister) of Ireland,
Éamon de
Valera, paid a visit to the German Minister in Dublin to
express sympathy over the death of the Führer,
Adolf Hitler. This action has been defended as
proper given the state's strict adherence to a policy of
neutrality. De Valera has been criticised for not making a similar
visit to the U.S. Minister upon the death of the President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, three weeks previously; he
had, however, moved the adjournment of
Dáil Éireann as a mark of respect to
the late President, and several of his cabinet colleagues
personally attended the American Legation to express the
Government's condolences.
Italy
Italy
had completed two conquests (Ethiopia and
Albania) prior to its entry into World War II. Despite the
Pact of Steel with Nazi Germany, Italy
did not join in the war until June 1940, planning to get a share of
Allied territory with the defeat of France. Italy's war effort went
poorly, resulting in defeats in Greece, North Africa, Ethiopia, and
the Mediterranean Sea. The Allies started to invade Italy in the
summer of 1943 and Mussolini's government collapsed. The new royal
government of Marshal
Pietro
Badoglio signed an armistice with the allies, but most of the
country was quickly occupied by the Germans, who established a
puppet government under Mussolini in the north, the
Italian Social Republic (also known
as the Salò Republic, from its headquarters). Badoglio and the king
escaped to Brindisi without giving any order to the army which
surrendered to the Germans without putting up a fight. The royal
government remained in control of the south, declared war on
Germany, and was eventually re-established as the government of all
of Italy shortly before the end of the war in the spring of
1945. Partisan actions took place in northern
Italy.
Italy would become a member of NATO
after the
war, but lost the regions of Istria
and Dalmatia to Yugoslavia,
and all its colonies excluding Somalia
.
Japan
Japan
was
leader of the Axis powers in the Pacific
Theatre. Some people consider that World War II actually
began with the invasion of China by Japan. The war ended with the
capitulation of Japan after the atomic bombings of
Hiroshima and
Nagasaki by the US. It should also be
noted that the advancing Soviet forces also played a part in the
surrender of Japan.
Korea
Korea
was annexed by Japan in 1910 and many
Koreans served in the Imperial
Japanese Army.
After the surrender of Japan to the allied forces in August 15,
1945, Korea was jointly occupied by Soviet and American forces,
with political disagreements leading to the separation of the
peninsula into two independent nations. This eventually escalated
into the
Korean War.
Laos
In 1945 the Japanese occupied Vientiane and Luang Phrabāng in
April.
King Sīsavāngvong was detained
by the Japanese, but his son Crown Prince
Savāngvatthanā called on all Lao to resist
the occupiers.
Prince Phetxarāt, however, opposed this position, and thought that
Lao independence could be gained by siding with the Japanese, who
made him Prime Minister of Luang Phrabāng, though not of Laos as a
whole. In practice the country was in chaos and Phetxarāt's
government had no real authority. Another Lao group, the Lao Sēri
(Free Lao), received unofficial support from the Free Thai movement
in the Isan region.
Thailand re-annexed a small portion of Laos following the
conclusion of the
French–Thai
War in 1941. The territories were only returned to French
sovereignty in October
1946.
Latvia
and Occupation of Latvia by Nazi Germany
After
the conclusion of Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact,
Latvia
was compelled to accept Soviet
garrisons. On June 16, 1940, threatening an invasion, Soviet
Union issued an ultimatum demanding that government be replaced and
that unlimited number of Soviet troops be admitted. Knowing that
the Red Army had entered Lithuania a day before, and that its
troops were massed along the eastern border and mindful of the
Soviet military bases in Western Latvia, the government acceded to
the demands, and Soviet troops occupied the country on
June 17. On August 5, 1940, following mock
parliamentary elections, Latvia was annexed into USSR. The
following year, August 1940 to June 1941 is known as the Year of
Terror in Latvia; USSR security agencies "Sovietized" Latvia, in
the process killing or deporting to their deaths in slave labor
camps between 35,000 and 50,000 residents of Latvia.
After the outbreak of German-Soviet hostilities, Soviet forces were
quickly driven out of the territory of Latvia by German forces,
with Riga being liberated from the Soviets on July 1, 1941 (eight
days after the start of hostilities). Initially, the German forces
were almost universally hailed as liberators, but Nazi occupation
policies gradually changed that. With the gradual defeat of the
German Armies on the Eastern Front, the Red Amy started reoccupying
Latvia in the late summer of 1944. Riga was retaken by Soviet
forces on October 13, 1944, and a major part of the German Army
Group North (Heersgruppe Nord) was cut off in
Kurzeme, the peninsula that forms the northwestern
part of Latvia. There they locally raised Latvian units formed the
"Kurland Fortress", which successfully held out until the end of
the war and only surrendered because it was ordered to by Admiral
Donitz as part of the overall German surrender. Both occupation
powers recruited volunteers and drafted conscripts for their armies
from the local population, but for both practical reasons and the
staunchly anti-communist inclination of the population, the vast
majority of men fought on the Axis side. The Latvian Waffen SS
Volunteer Legion was officially formed on March 16, 1943, but the
first Latvian Security Police Battalions had been formed more than
a year earlier. Despite the word "volunteer" in the name of the
Legion, the German Occupation Government soon resorted to
conscription to increase it size, and Latvia became one of two
countries (the other was Estonia) from where the Waffen SS soldiers
were draftees. By July 1, 1944, more than 110,000 men were under
arms in German controlled units. The Latvian Legion consisted of
87,550 men, of them 31,446 serving in the combat units that were
directly part of the Waffen SS (the 15th and 19th Waffen-Grenadier
Divisions), 12,118 in Border Guard regiments, 42,386 in various
Police Forces, and 1,600 in other units. 22,744 men served in units
outside Legion such as Wehrmacht Auxiliaries. On September 12,
1950, Harry N. Rosenfield, the United Nations Refugee Relief
Association Commissioner, wrote the following to Latvian Ambassador
J. Feldmanis, minister plenipotentiary, chargé d'affaires of
Latvia: "That the Baltic Waffen SS. Units (Baltic Legions) are to
be considered as separate and distinct in purpose, ideology,
activities, and qualifications for membership from the German SS,
and therefore the Commission holds them not to be a movement
hostile to the Government of the United States under Section 13 of
the Displaced Persons Act, as amended." Some Latvian personnel did
take part in the Holocaust however, working as part of both the
Soviet and the Nazi occupation governments. .
Some Latvian units
formed in the Red Army participated in the defense of Moscow
and experienced heavy casualties. According
to Krivosheev, between 1941 and 1945, 11,600 people of Latvian
nationality lost their lives while serving in the
RKKA.
Lebanon
Lebanon
was under the control of France during the
war and thus controlled by the puppet Vichy government after
France's capitulation. Lebanon was wrested from Vichy France
by Allied forces during the
Syria-Lebanon campaign.
De Gaulle declared Lebanon independent on
November 22, 1943.
Liberia
Liberia
granted Allied forces access to its
territory early in the war. It was used as a transit point for
troops and resources bound for North Africa, particularly war
supplies flown from Parnamirim (near
Natal
) in Brazil
. Perhaps more importantly, it served as one
of the Allies' only sources of
rubber during
the war; the plantations of Southeast Asia had been taken over by
the Japanese. The importance of this resource led to significant
improvement of Liberia's transport infrastructure and a
modernisation of its economy. Liberia's strategic significance was
emphasised when Franklin Roosevelt, after attending the
Casablanca Conference, visited Liberia
and met President
Edwin Barclay.
Despite its assistance to the Allies, however, Liberia was
reluctant to end its official neutrality and declare war on
Germany. This did not occur until January 27, 1944.
Liechtenstein
Shortly
following the end of World War I, Liechtenstein
concluded a customs and monetary agreement
with neighboring Switzerland
. In 1919, the close ties between the two
nations were strengthened when Liechtenstein entrusted Switzerland
with its external relations. At the outbreak of war,
Prince Franz Josef
II, who had ascended the throne only months before, promised to
keep the principality out of the war and relied upon its close ties
to Switzerland for its protection.
Attempts to sway the government did occur. After an attempted coup
in March 1939, the National Socialist "
German National
Movement in Liechtenstein" was active but small. The
organization, as well as any Nazi sympathies, virtually disappeared
following the eruption of war.
Lithuania
As a
result of Molotov-Ribbentrop
Pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union,
Lithuania
was occupied by the Red Army and forcibly
annexed into the Soviet Union along with Latvia
and Estonia
, without giving any military resistance.
This made some Lithuanians side with the Germans when Hitler
eventually invaded the Soviet Union in the hopes to restore
Lithuania's independence. Some of the collaborators were involved
in the Holocaust and other crimes against humanity. A Lithuanian
division was also formed in the Red Army. According to Krivosheev,
11,600 Lithuanians died fighting for the DNA.
Luxembourg
When
Germany invaded France by way of the Low Countries in the spring of
1940, Luxembourg
, despite its neutrality, was quickly
invaded and occupied (despite attempts by the government to slow
the advancing German forces), having put up little resistance and
immediately surrendering. The Luxembourgeois government went
into exile but never declared war on the Axis, and Luxembourg was
effectively annexed by Germany. Luxembourg remained under German
control until liberated by the Allies at the end of 1944.
Malaya
Malaya was under
British rule before the war began. It was occupied by Japan in 1942
through 1945. The
Malayan
Communist Party became the backbone of the
Malayan Peoples'
Anti-Japanese Army.
Malta
Malta
was a British colony during World War
II. The Legislative Council of Malta reaffirmed the people's
loyalty to Britain on September 5, 1939.
Between June 1940 and December 1942, Malta was one of the most
heavily bombed places on earth. Malta became the besieged and
battered arena for one of the most decisive struggles of World War
II, with some historians calling this battle
The Mediterranean
Stalingrad. The UK awarded the
George
Cross to the island of Malta in a letter dated April 15, 1942,
from
King George VI
to the island's Governor
William
Dobbie: "To honour her brave people, I award the George Cross
to the Island Fortress of Malta to bear witness to a heroism and
devotion that will long be famous in history".
The fortitude of the population under sustained enemy air raids and
a naval blockade which almost saw them starved into submission, won
widespread admiration in Britain and other Allied nations. The
George Cross is woven into the
Flag of
Malta.
Manchukuo
Established in 1931 as a puppet state of Japan, the state of
Manchukuo was led by
Pu Yi, the last Emperor of China, who reigned
as Emperor Kang De. The state contributed little to the war but
remained a loyal ally to Japan until 1945. In 1945, the Soviet
Union declared war on Japan, and Manchukuo was subsequently invaded
and abolished. The former puppet state was returned to China.
Mexico
Originally built as the Italian tanker
Lucífero, the Potrero del Llano
had been seized in port by the
Mexican
government in April 1941 and renamed in
honor of a region in Veracruz. She was attacked and crippled
by the German submarine
U-564 on 13 May 1942. The
attack killed 14 of 35 crewmen.
On 20 May 1942, a second tanker,
Faja de
Oro
(which was formerly the Italian
Genoano, seized by Mexico one day after the Pearl Harbor
attack) was attacked and sunk by the German U-160, killing 10 of
37 crewmen, and the Mexican government was prompted to declare war
on the Axis powers on 22 May 1942. The
Mexican Air Force's
Escuadron Aereo de Pelea 201 (201st
Fighter Squadron) served with the U.S.
Fifth Air Force in the Philippines
during the final year of the war.
Monaco
While
Prince Louis II's sympathies were strongly pro-French, he tried to
keep Monaco
neutral during World War II, and he
supported the Vichy France government
of his old army colleague, Philippe
Pétain. In 1943, the Italian army invaded and occupied
Monaco, setting up a fascist government administration. Shortly
thereafter, following Mussolini's collapse in Italy, the German
army occupied Monaco and began the deportation of the Jewish
population. Among them was
René
Blum, founder of the Ballet de l'Opera, who died in a Nazi
extermination camp.
Mongolia
During
the war, Mongolia
was ruled by the communist government of
Khorloogiin Choibalsan and
was closely linked to the Soviet Union. After the
Soviet-Japanese Neutrality
Pact of 1941, Mongolia remained neutral throughout most of the
war, but its geographical situation meant that it in fact served as
a buffer between Japanese forces and the Soviet Union. In addition
to keeping around 10% of the population under arms, Mongolia
provided supplies and raw materials to the Soviet military, and
financed several units, for example the
Revolutionary
Mongolia tank squadron.
Mongolian troops took part in the Battle
of Khalkhin Gol
in Summer 1939 and in the Soviet invasion of Manchuria in
August 1945, both times as small part in Soviet-led operations
against Japanese forces and their Manchu
and Inner Mongolian allies.
For
Mongolia, the most important result of World War II was the
recognition of its independence by China, as provided by the
Yalta
agreement
.
Morocco
Most of
Morocco
was a protectorate of France during World War
II. When France was defeated, Morocco came under the control
of the Vichy regime, and therefore was nominally on the side of the
Axis powers, although an active resistance movement operated.
In
November 1942, it was invaded by the Allies as part of Operation
Torch
. From that point, Moroccan volunteers
(the
Goumier) fought on the side of the
Allies.
A small
area in northern Morocco, Spanish
Morocco, was a Spanish protectorate and remained neutral
throughout the war, as did the international city of Tangier
.
Nauru
Nauru was administered by
Australia under a League of Nations mandate. Nauru was shelled by a
German surface
raider in December 1940,
aiming to incapacitate its
phosphate
mining operations (this action was probably the most distant
military activity carried out by Germany during the entire war).
Phosphates are important for making
ammunition and
fertilizers. Nauru was occupied by Japan from
1942 to 1945, and it was the target of shelling by American
battleships and cruisers, and aerial bombing by the Allies.
For
example, Nauru was bombarded by the USS
North Carolina
, USS
Washington , USS South
Dakota , USS
Indiana , USS Massachusetts
, and the USS
Alabama
, on 8 December 1943, and also bombed by
U.S. Navy
carrier airplanes on the same day. See the article on the
USS
Washington.
Nepal
Nepal
declared war on Germany on September
4, 1939, and offered Gurkha troops to
Britain.
Netherlands
Like the
Belgians, the Netherlands
declared neutrality in 1939. In May
1940, after the capitulation of Norway, the Netherlands was invaded
after fierce resistance against the Nazis.
Rotterdam
and Middelburg
were heavily bombed. The Dutch joined the
Allies and contributed their surviving naval and armed forces to
the defense of East Asia, in particular the Netherlands East Indies
. Until their liberation in 1945, the
Dutch fought alongside the Allies around the globe, from the
battles in the Pacific to the
Battle
of Britain.
On the islands of Aruba
and Curacao
(Netherlands West Indies) a large oil-refinery
was of major importance for the war-effort in Europe, especially
after D-day. As protection, a considerable U.S. military
force was stationed on the island.
Netherlands East Indies
The rich
oil resources of the Dutch East
Indies were arguably a prime objective of the Japanese military in
its attack on the Allies from December 7, 1941. The
Royal Netherlands Navy and the
Royal Netherlands
East Indies Army were part of the
American-British-Dutch-Australian
Command, until the Allied forces in the Netherlands East Indies
were defeated by Japan in March 1942. Some Dutch personnel and
ships escaped to Australia, where they continued to fight the
Japanese. The Dutch East Indies was occupied by the Japanese for
the remainder of the war.
Newfoundland
During World War II the
Dominion of Newfoundland
was a part of the
British
Commonwealth. It joined the war on 4 September 1939, declaring
war on Germany. Aware that a German invasion of Newfoundland could
be used as a bridgestone to an attack on Canada, in 1940 the
Canadian
Prime Minister William Mackenzie King and the
Newfoundland
Governor Sir
Humphrey T. Walwyn entered into negotiations
regarding the strengthening of defensive positions along the
Newfoundland coast. Notwithstanding their separate political
identities, the defenses of Newfoundland, and the Newfoundland Home
Guard forces, were integrated with the Canada military, and both
governments in agreement to the formation of a joint coastal
defense organization. As part of the Anglo-American
Destroyers for Bases
Agreement, the United States was granted Air Force and
U.S. Navy bases on
Newfoundland's territory at Argentia
, Stephenville
, and St John's
.
Newfoundlanders were encouraged to enlist
in the large armed forces of the United Kingdom
and of Canada
. Over 3,200 Newfoundlanders enlisted in the
Royal Navy. On September 14, 1939, The
Royal Navy requested 625 experienced fishermen or seamen for
special service in the Northern Patrol, guarding the Atlantic
shipping lanes.
Winston Churchill was particularly
interested in these recruits, calling them “the hardiest and most
skilful boatmen in rough seas who exist.” The Royal Artillery
raised two regiments, the 57th Newfoundland Field Regiment, which
fought in North Africa and Italy
, and the 59th Newfoundland Heavy Artillery, which
fought in Normandy and northwestern Europe. Another 700
Newfoundlanders served in the
Royal Air
Force, most notably with the 125th Newfoundland Squadron. In
all, some 15,000 Newfoundlanders saw active service, and thousands
more were engaged in the hazardous duty of the
Merchant Navy. Some 900 Newfoundlanders
(including at least 257 Merchant Mariners) lost their lives in the
conflict, and over 100 Newfoundlanders were killed in the sinking
of the SS
Caribou by a German
U-boat.
Newfoundland might have been the only
location in North America to be subject to direct attack by German
forces in World War II when German U-boats attacked four Allied ore
carriers and the loading pier at Bell Island
. The
cargo
ships S.S.
Saganaga and S.S.
Lord Strathcona
were sunk by the
U-513 on 5 September 1942,
and the S.S.
Rosecastle and
P.L.M. 27 were
sunk by the U-518
on 2 November 1942, with the loss of 69
lives. However, Allied ships (including American
and Mexican
ones) were sunk within sight of the North
American shoreline (inside the territorial waters), and teams of
German saboteurs landed via U-boats in New York State
and in Florida
. Also, German troops were landed on Greenland
to establish weather stations, and they were
prepared to shoot.
New Zealand
New Zealand
was the first country to declare war on
Germany, if measured by the local time . It declared war on
9:30 p.m. (N.Z. time) on 3 September 1939, with Prime Minister
Savage declaring war from his bed:
- "With gratitude for the past and confidence in the future, we
range ourselves without fear beside Britain. Where she goes, we go;
where she stands, we stand. We are only a small and young nation,
but we march with a union of hearts and souls to a common
destiny."
New
Zealand sent one Army division that served in Greece
, North Africa, and
Italy
, and it offered a fair number of pilots and
aircrewmen to the Royal Air Force in
England. Royal New
Zealand Navy warships fought in the South Atlantic
, including in the Battle
of Rio de la Plata
in 1939, before being called back to defend the
homeland. New Zealand fought in the Pacific War through warships of the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN), the Royal
New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF), and
independent army brigades, such as on Vella Lavella
. While New Zealand's home islands were not
attacked, the casualty rate suffered by the military was the worst
per capita of all Commonwealth nations, except for Great
Britain.
In the
South West
Pacific theater, the RNZAF participated in
a unique force, AirSols, in the Solomon
Islands
, consisting of squadrons from the U.S. Marine Corps,
U.S. Navy,
USAAF, and RNZAF, sometimes with help from the
RAAF, too.
Nicaragua
During
the war, Nicaragua
was ruled by Anastasio Somoza García, who
had assumed the presidency after a military coup in 1937.
Somoza was an ally of the United States, and Nicaragua declared war
on Japan immediately after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Three days
later, on
December 11, Nicaragua
declared war on Germany and Italy, and on
December 19, it declared war on Bulgaria,
Romania, and Hungary.
Northern Rhodesia
Northern Rhodesia
(later Zambia
) was a British colony. As such, it was
covered by the British declaration of war. Northern Rhodesian units
served in
East
Africa.
Norway
Norway
was strategically important because it was
a route for the transport of iron ore from
Sweden to Germany, via Narvik
. Churchill
had from the beginning of the war stated his wish for fighting Nazi
Germany on Norwegian and Scandinavian soil, to prevent damages to
central Europe as was seen in the previous war. The German
Kriegsmarine had also promoted the advantages
of naval bases in Norway.
The integrity of her territory was further
compromised when the German tanker Altmark was boarded, in
Norwegian waters, from the British destroyer HMS Cossack in order to release
British merchant seamen held captive (Altmark Incident
).
Despite this, Norway remained neutral until it was invaded by
Germany on 9 April 1940, as part of
Operation Weserübung. The
Norwegian government fled the capital and after
two months of fighting went to Britain
and continued the fight in exile.
After the occupation, the Germans began producing a critical
material used in the manufacture of
atomic bombs in Norway:
heavy water.
An Anglo-Norwegian operation to destroy the
facility at Norsk
Hydro
Heavy Water Plant was aborted after the loss
of British airborne engineers. A subsequent operation by
Norwegian commandos in February 1943 successfully destroyed stores
of heavy water and equipment. A raid of American heavy bombers in
November persuaded the Germans that the area was unsafe, and they
decided to move heavy water supplies to Germany. While en route,
Norwegian agents planted explosives and sank a ferry carrying the
heavy water and other machinery needed for bomb development.
The Allies maintained a deception of a planned invasion of Norway
and
commando
raids on coastal installations supported this. As a result,
additional German troops were held there and the German surface
fleet were kept in Norwegian waters to repel any attempts.
In 1944,
Finnmark
was liberated by the Soviet Union, and (together
with the northern parts of Troms) totally
destroyed by the retreating Nazis, while the German forces in the
rest of Norway surrendered on 8 May 1945.
Norway declared war on Japan on 6 July 1945, with reciprocal effect
dating back to 7 December 1941.
The delay in the formal declaration against
Japan had been caused by the need for the Norwegian Parliament
to approve such an act in advance, and it had been
impossible for the parliament to convene during the German
occupation. Several hundred Norwegian sailors died when
their ships were sunk by Japanese forces or during subsequent
captivity. Around 300 Norwegian sailors were held as PoWs by the
Japanese during World War II.
After
the war, Norway became one of the founding members of NATO
.
Oman
The
Sultan
of Oman
declared war on Germany on September 10,
1939. Omani forces fought under British command in the
Middle East theatre.
Panama
Panama
was somewhat under American control
throughout the war. The small Panama Canal Zone
was United
States
territory, and American forces from the U.S. Navy, and the
U.S. Army and Howard
Air Force Base
, the USAAF, inside the Canal
Zone, guarded the Panama Canal
from both ends. This Canal provided
the United States and its Allies with the ability to move warships
and troops rapidly between the Atlantic Ocean
and the Pacific Ocean
. Since most of the American shipbuilding
capability was on the East Coast and the Gulf of
Mexico
, the Canal was vital for moving new warships to the
Pacific to fight the Japanese
Navy.
Paraguay
Paraguay
's authoritarian government under Higinio Moríñigo was sympathetic
to the Axis powers early in the war; the country's large German
community in particular were supporters of Nazism. Serious
thought was given to joining the war on Germany's side, however,
Franklin D. Roosevelt managed to avoid this
happening with aid and military hardware in 1942. Despite this,
Paraguay did not declare war on Germany until February 2, 1945,
when it was clear the Allies were near victory.
Peru
Peru
broke off relations with the Axis on January 24, 1942.
Due its
ability to produce aviation fuel and its proximity to the Panama
Canal, the oil refinery and port city of Talara
, in northwest Peru, became an American air
base. Although Peru did not declare war with Germany and
Japan until 1945 (actually, Peru declared a "state of
belligerency"), the
Peruvian Navy
patrolled the Panama Canal area.
Philippines
In 1941, the
Philippine
Commonwealth was a semi-independent
Commonwealth of
the United States. The
Philippine
Army was commanded by the American General
Douglas MacArthur, and the Philippines was
one of the first countries invaded by Japan. Filipino forces and
the U.S. Army
maintained a
stubborn resistance.
General MacArthur was ordered by the
President to withdraw his headquarters to Australia, where he made
his famous statement "I came out of Bataan
, and I shall return". American forces in
the Philippines surrendered at Corregidor
, on 8 May 1942. Despite the surrender,
resistance in the Philippines continued. Elements of the Philippine
Army continued their activity and were able to free all but twelve
of the fifty
Provinces of
the Philippines. Other groups such as the
Hukbalahap were also involved. While in exile,
President
Manuel L. Quezon continued to
represent the Philippines until his
death from tuberculosis in 1944.
American forces under General MacArthur
made their return in October 1944, beginning with amphibious landings on Leyte
island
.
Poland
The
Second World War started in September 1939, as Poland
suffered an attack by Nazi Germany and later by
the USSR. Many Polish troops and servicemen escaped the
occupied country. They
reorganized in France and
took part in the Battle of France. Later Poles
organized troops in the United
Kingdom and were integrated into the forces of Britain with
Polish pilots serving with distinction in the Battle of Britain.
The
Polish
resistance is remembered for its size and daring and brave
methods of resisting occupation, often facing German forces in
pitched battle.
Polish
armies also reformed in Soviet territory. The Polish-Jewish
community was mostly exterminated in the
Holocaust in Nazi-occupied
Poland, and Poles themselves were considered to be a threat to
the "German race".
Millions of Poles were sent to
concentration camps or were killed in other fashions in
occupied Poland.
Portugal
For the
duration of World War II, Portugal
was under the control of the dictator
António de Oliveira
Salazar, who led a similar government to the Francisco Franco regime in neighbouring
Spain
. Early in September 1939, Portugal
proclaimed its neutrality to avoid a military operation in
Portuguese territory by the
Axis or
Allies. This action was welcomed by Great Britain and
reaffirmed historic Anglo-Portuguese treaties with England dating
from 1373 (
Anglo-Portuguese
Alliance) and 1386 (
Treaty of
Windsor).
Germany's invasion of France brought the
Nazis to the Pyrenees
, which allowed Hitler to bring unanticipated
pressures on Portugal and Spain. Following the Nazi invasion
of Russia which cut-off their supply of
tungsten metal from Asia, Germany initiated tactics
to extract tungsten from Portugal. Initially, Germany artificially
ran up prices in an attempt to get the people to bypass the
Portuguese government and sell directly to German agents. Salazar
attempted to limit this, and in October 1941, Germany sank a
Portuguese merchant ship, the first neutral ship to be sunk in
World War II. A German
U-boat torpedoed a
second Portuguese ship in December.
Despite efforts to resist, and because of the German threat to
Portuguese merchant trade, in January 1942 Salazar signed an
agreement to sell tungsten to Germany. In June 1943, Britain
invoked the long-standing Anglo-Portuguese Alliance requesting the
use of the
Azores, to establish an air force
and naval air base. Salazar complied at once. The Allies then
promised all possible aid in the event of a German attack against
Portugal. Additionally, the United States and Great Britain
guaranteed the integrity of Portugal's territorial possessions. In
1944, Portugal declared a total embargo of tungsten shipments to
Germany.
Although the German Ambassador in Lisbon
protested the Azores agreement, Germany never
retaliated against Portugal.
Even while under intense German pressure, and with the presence of
Nazi spies in Portugal, Lisbon became a safe-haven to a scattering
of
Jews from all over Europe. At the outbreak of
World War II,
Jewish refugees from Central
Europe were granted resident status. After the German invasion of
France, Portugal adopted a liberal visa policy, which allowed
thousands of Jewish refugees to enter the country. As the war
progressed, Portugal gave entry
visa
to people coming via rescue operations, on the condition that
Portugal would only be used as a transit point. Portugal also
joined other "neutral" countries in the efforts made to save
Hungarian Jews. More than 100,000 Jews and other refugees were able
to flee Nazi Germany into freedom via Lisbon. By the early 1940s,
there were thousands of Jews arriving in Lisbon and leaving weeks
later to other countries, such as in South America and Africa. Only
a small minority decided to stay in Portugal.
Portuguese Timor
In early 1942, Portuguese authorities maintained their neutrality,
in spite of warnings from the Australian and Dutch East Indies
governments that Japan would invade.
To protect their own
positions in neighboring Dutch Timor,
Australian and Dutch forces landed in Portuguese Timor
and occupied the territory. There was no
armed opposition from Portuguese forces or the civilian population.
However, within a matter of weeks, Japanese forces landed but were
unable to subdue substantial resistance, in the form of a
guerrilla campaign launched by Allied
commandos and continued by the local
population. It is estimated that 40,000 - 70,000 Timorese civilians
were killed by Japanese forces during 1942-45.
[106906]
Macau
Although
the Japanese military invaded and occupied the neighboring British
colony of Hong
Kong
in 1941, they initially avoided direct interference
in the affairs of Macau
. Although it remained neutral
territory, belonging to Portugal, Portuguese authorities lacked the
ability to prevent Japanese activities in and around Macau. In
1943, Japan ordered the government of Macau to accept Japanese
advisors. The limited Portuguese military forces at Macau were also
disarmed, although Macau was never occupied.
Romania
Romania
had its first involvement in the war
in providing transit rights for
members of the Polish government, its treasury, and many Polish
troops in 1939. During 1940, threatened with Soviet
invasion, Romania ceded territory to the Soviet Union, Hungary, and
Bulgaria, and following an internal political upheaval, Romania
joined the Axis.
As a member of the Axis, the Romanian war
effort was almost entirely spent on the Eastern Front, with its
forces taking part in the capture of Odessa
. With the entry of Soviet troops into
Romania near the end of the war, a pro-Soviet government was
installed, and Romania joined the Allies as a
co-belligerent for the remainder of the war.
Romania became a key member of the
Warsaw
Pact after the war.
Samoa
Samoa
declared war on Germany on the
September 3, 1939 at 11:00pm Samoan time along with New Zealand,
which administered all of Western Samoa under a League of Nations Mandate.
Prior to
World War I, Samoa had been a German
colony and was captured in 1914, by New Zealand
. Under the
Treaty of Versailles, Germany
relinquished its claims to the islands. During the war, Samoa sent
a division to help the Australians and Americans in the Pacific. In
1942, it formed the 6th Samoan Army, countries were amazed that
such a small country, at the time, could form a whole army group.
On
November 17, 1943, Japan invaded the island of Upolo
. The prime minister quickly sent the 7th
army that was supposed to be in
Papau island.
At 1:00 am in the morning Japan sent a division to invade the
island but were quickly withdrawn in the confusion of the night.
The well trained Samoan soldiers never fired a single shot, in the
only Japanese attack on Samoa.
American Samoa
American Samoa
is American territory and a U.S. Navy base.
This was used during the War.
San Marino
Ever
since the times of Giuseppe
Garibaldi, San
Marino
has maintained strong ties with the
Italian state. San Marino joined Italy in declaring war on
Great Britain in 1940. Following the Italian surrender, San Marino
immediately declared its neutrality. On September 21, 1944, San
Marino declared war on Germany, which eventually occupied the
nation while retreating northward. Following the war, San Marino
provided for nearly 100,000 refugees.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
did sever diplomatic contacts with
Germany on September 11, 1939, and with Japan in October
1941. Although officially neutral, the Saudis did provide
the Allies with large supplies of oil. Diplomatic relations with
the United States were estblished in 1943.
King Abdul Aziz Al-Saud was a
personal friend of Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The Americans were
then allowed to build an air force base near Dhahran
. On February 28, 1945, Saudi Arabia
declared war on Germany and Japan, but there was no military
participation.
Sealand
In 1943,
HM Fort
Roughs
was constructed by the United Kingdom, on the
site of what would become the Principality of Sealand
as one of the Maunsell Forts, primarily for defense against
German mine-laying aircraft that might be targeting the estuaries
that were part of vital shipping lanes. The facility was
occupied by 150–300 Royal Navy personnel throughout World War II.
The fort would later play in important role in the country's
Independence in 1967 and later the
The Sealand Conflict war in 1978.
Scotland
Singapore
Singapore
was a crown colony under British rule
and is in a strategic location for shipping routes connecting Asia
to Europe. For these reasons, Japan invaded Singapore
in the Battle
of Singapore
from February 7, 1942 to February 14,
1942. The city was renamed
Syonan and kept under
Japanese occupation until the end of the war in September
1945.
South Africa
As a member of the British Commonwealth, the Union of
South Africa declared
war on Germany shortly after the United Kingdom, on September 6,
1939. Three South African infantry divisions and one armoured
division fought under Allied commands in Europe and elsewhere, most
notably in the
North African
campaign and the
Italian campaign.
Most of
the South African
2nd Division was taken prisoner with the fall of Tobruk
on June 21, 1942. Under the Joint Air
Training Scheme, part of the British Commonwealth Air
Training Plan, South Africa trained 33 347 aircrews for the
RAF, SAAF
and other
Allied air forces. Only Canada trained
more.
Southern Rhodesia
Southern Rhodesia
(later Zimbabwe
) was a self governing British colony. As
such, it was covered by the British declaration of war. Rhodesian
units served in
East Africa, Europe,
North Africa and notably Burma.
Southern Rhodesian troops were not allowed to serve as a composite
unit (unlike their Australian, Canadian, or South African
counterparts) because they constituted a significant part of the
settler population. A significant number of Southern Rhodesian
troops, especially in the Rhodesian African Rifles, were not of
white origin (mainly
Ndebele and mixed
race). Their service has never been recognised by the ZANU (PF)
government in Harare.
Ian Smith, the
future Prime Minister, like most of his white contemporaries,
served under British command, as a fighter pilot during the
Battle of Britain.
Soviet Union / Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
The
Soviet
Union
's participation in World War II began with
the Battle
of Khalkhin Gol
, with Japan in Mongolia in 1939. Later that
year, protected with the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, it invaded
eastern Poland about three weeks after the Germans invaded the west
of the country.
During the next eleven months the Soviets
occupied and annexed the
Baltic states (Estonia
, Latvia
, and Lithuania
). The Soviet Union supported Germany in the
war effort against Western Europe through the
1939
German–Soviet Commercial Agreement and larger
1940
German–Soviet Commercial Agreement with supplies of
raw materials, significantly weakening the
British naval blockade.
Following Finland
's refusal of Soviet demands for military bases
and a territorial swap, the Soviet Union invaded on November 30,
1939, in the Winter War.
The
Soviet Union also annexed Bessarabia
(a Romanian
province since 1918), leading Romania to ally
with Germany. Germany launched a
surprise attack on the Soviet Union in
1941. Thereafter, most of the German forces were concentrated on
the Eastern Front. The USSR played a crucial role in the defeat of
Nazi Germany.
The Soviet Red Army mounted a successful counter-offensive during
the winter, and gained the initiative with a series of major
victories in 1943, culminating in the ultimate advance of Soviet
forces into Eastern Europe and Germany in 1945, concluded with the
Battle of Berlin. The Soviet Union
suffered greater losses, both among civilians and military forces,
than any of the other participants in the war. However, the
RKKA took out almost two times more axis
soldiers than all other allies together. Following the end of the
war in Europe and the American atomic bombing of Hiroshima, the
USSR declared war on Japan in 1945. The Soviet Union became one of
the main victors and gained one of the permanent seats in the
United Nations Security
Council. After the war, the Soviet
sphere of influence was widened to cover
most of Eastern Europe, formalized in the Warsaw Pact, to counter
the western Allies and NATO. The Soviet Union came to be considered
one of the two
superpowers of the
Cold War.
Spain
The
Franco government of
Spain
had risen to power as a result to a
significant degree of Italian and German intervention and support. Spain,
which was suffering the aftermath of the recently-finished
Spanish Civil War, did not have the
resources to join the war on its own, and Franco and Hitler did not
achieve an agreement about the terms of the Spanish participation.
Despite its non-belligerency, Spain sent volunteers to fight
alongside Germans against the Soviet Union in the form of the
Blue Division. As the Allies emerged
as possible victors, the regime became more neutral, at least in
theory, finally declaring its neutrality in July 1943 although the
complete removal of Spanish troops from Eastern Front was completed
just in March 1944.
Sweden
Sweden
maintained neutrality throughout the
war, though some Swedish volunteers participated in the Winter War
as well as in the Continuation War
against the Soviet
Union
. Sweden also supplied many materials for
Germany, in particular high-quality iron ore which enabled Germany
to build up its army, and ball bearings which were crucial for
military hardware, almost as tribute to avoid invasion. The Allies
put much of effort into the Norwegian theater simply to encourage
Sweden to join the war.
After Denmark and Norway were invaded on April 9, 1940, Sweden and
the other remaining Baltic Sea countries became enclosed by Nazi
Germany and the Soviet Union, then on friendly terms with each
other as formalized in the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. The lengthy
fighting in Norway resulted in intensified German demands for
indirect support from Sweden, demands that Swedish diplomats were
able to fend off by reminding the Germans of the Swedes' feeling of
closeness to their Norwegian brethren. With the conclusion of
hostilities in Norway this argument became untenable, forcing the
Cabinet to give in to German pressure and allow continuous
(unarmed) troop transports, via Swedish railroads, between Germany
and Norway.
The extent of these transports was kept secret, although spreading
rumors soon forced prime minister
Per
Albin Hansson to admit their existence. Officially the trains
transported wounded soldiers and soldiers on leave
(permittent-tåg), which would still have been in violation of
Sweden's proclaimed neutrality.
In all, close to 100,000 railroad cars had transported two million
German soldiers trough Sweden by the time the transit agreement was
disbanded on 5 August 1943. Those soldiers were sent to
Norway.
At most there was more than 350.000 German soldiers in Norway. A
considerable force was fighting from Finnmark (Kirkenes port etc.)
against the Russians near Murmansk.
Source :
http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sverige_under_andre_verdenskrig
Switzerland
Switzerland
intended to be a neutral power during the
war, but German threats and military mobilizations towards its
borders prompted the Swiss military to prepare for war.
Following the German invasion of Poland on 1 September 1939, this
country was completely mobilized within three days. Though a Nazi
invasion of Switzerland, codenamed
Operation Tannenbaum was planned for
1940, the event never ultimately occurred because Hitler decided
such a conflict would be a waste of resources at a time when he
preferred to concentrate on the invasion of Britain. Unlike the
Netherlands, Belgium, and other western European nations which had
easily fallen under Nazi invasion, Switzerland had a strong
military and a mountainous geographic terrain that would have
likely made an invasion long and difficult.
Despite its neutrality, Switzerland was not free of hostilities.
Early in the war, several German aircraft were shot down by Swiss
fighters for violating Swiss air space. Hundreds of aircraft on
both sides, which landed in Switzerland, such as with battle
damage, were interned at Swiss airports and their crews held until
the end of the war. Allied airmen were interned, in some cases,
contrary to Swiss Law and some were subject to abuse in internment
camps. Several Swiss cities were accidentally bombed by both sides.
In time, Switzerland was unofficially proclaimed its own side in
the war, due to the defensive and hostile nature against both
sides.
Although the Swiss government was anti-Nazi, Swiss troops did not
directly intervene into the European conflict. It became embroiled
in post-war controversies regarding the appropriation of assets
belonging to Holocaust victims and Nazi officials' use of
Swiss banks to keep their money safe.
Syria
Syria
was under French control throughout the
war. From the French surrender in 1940, this was the 'Vichy'
government that was sympathetic to the Nazi regime. Churchill had
fears about the use of Syria to threaten Britain's Iraqi oil
supplies.
These appeared to be substantiated when
Luftwaffe supply flights to the new pro-German Iraqi regime (under
Rashid Ali) refuelled in Damascus
.
In June 1941, British and Free French forces invaded Syria, and
after giving effective opposition, the Vichy forces surrendered in
July 1941. British occupation lasted until the end of the
war.
The
province of İskenderun
was given to Turkey
to keep them neutral in the war.
Thailand
Thailand
was nominally an ally of Japan at the
beginning of the war. The country was ruled at first by
Field Marshal
Plaek
Phibunsongkhram, a military dictator with nationalist leanings,
underneath the Thai King. Thailand remained uninvolved when war
broke out in Europe, but it took the opportunity of France's defeat
to settle historical claims to parts of
French Indochina. The conflict between
Thailand and the Vichy regime is known as the
French–Thai War.
In 1941, the
Japanese entered Thailand, and they used it as a bridgestone to
invade Burma
and
eastmost India
.
Phibun, while reluctant, believed that Japan's superior military
power gave Thailand no choice but to order an armistice, and he
allowed the Japanese military to pass through. The Premier became
more enthusiastic about co-operation with Japan when the Japanese
performed well in Malaya, and on 21 December, a formal "alliance"
was concluded.
At noon on 25 January 1942, Thailand
declared war on the United States and Great Britain
. Some Thais supported the alliance,
arguing that it was in the national interest, or arguing that it
was better sense to ally oneself with a victorious power. Others
formed the
Free Thai Movement to
resist. Eventually, when the war turned against the Japanese,
Phibun was forced to resign, and a Free Thai-controlled government
was formed. On 16 August 1945, Thailand rescinded its declarations
of war.
Tonga
The
Queen of Tonga
put her island country's resources at
the disposal of Britain and was a loyal supporter of the Allied
cause throughout the war.
Transjordan
Transjordan
was nominally a British protectorate,
and the Transjordanian forces were under British command during the
war.
Turkey
Turkey
was neutral until several months before
the end of the war, at which point it joined the Allies. The
president
Ismet Inonu did his best to
keep Turkey out of the war despite pressure from Nazi Germany and
the Western Allies. During the War, Turkey helped the Jewish
Community by protecting those who made it to Turkey. Later, most of
the Jewish people who lived in Turkey during the War moved to
Israel.
United Kingdom
The
United
Kingdom
was one of the original Allies, entering
the war in 1939 to honour its guarantees to Poland. After
the fall of France, the United Kingdom was the only Allied nation
left in Europe until the invasion of Greece. It remained the only
one of the Big Three in the war until 1941 when the Soviet Union
was invaded. The United Kingdom was heavily engaged in the Western
European, Atlantic, Mediterranean, African and South East Asian
theatres, and was considered one of the Big Three during Allied
conferences in the second half of the war. The United Kingdom
maintained close ties with the nations of the
British Empire, and the forces of those
countries were often incorporated into British military
operations.
Channel Islands
The
Channel Islands
are self-governing British dependences, off the French coast and
were the only British territory occupied by Germany.
They were occupied by German forces after the fall of France and
after British forces had been withdrawn. They played little active
part in the war. Strong German defences were set up, but the
islands were not assaulted, except by occasional hit-and-run
commando raids. German forces surrendered at the end of the
war.
Almost all the Jewish people fled the islands before the German
occupation. Those who remained were deported to extermination camps
and killed.
Isle of Man
The
Isle of
Man
is a self-governing Crown dependency
external to the United Kingdom. Its foreign relations and
defence however are the responsibility of the government of the
United Kingdom.
During the Second World War the Isle of Man had a detention camp
for Axis citizens and suspected sympathisers, including members of
the
British Union of
Fascists and the
IRA. A naval base, radar
network and training stations were also established on the
island.
Northern Ireland
As a
part of the United
Kingdom
, Northern Ireland
participated fully as a
belligerent. The particular contributions were manpower (see
above), food, armaments, and its unique geographical location.
Despite
urgings from the Stormont
government, conscription was never implemented in the
region as the British Government could not impose conscription in
Northern Ireland due to nationalist opposition, which echoed
nationalist agitation against conscription during World War I. As part of fears over the
invasion of Northern Ireland via
Plan
Kathleen, or the invasion of Ireland via
Plan Green, the British and Irish
conducted joint planning to repel a German invasion under the guise
of
Plan W. Joint training between Irish
Defense Force personnel and British special operations personnel
also took place in
County Down.
United States of America
The
United
States of America
was neutral early in the war, although
it steadily grew ties with the Allies and began providing increased
levels of assistance to them. The United States
joined the Allies in December 1941 after the Japanese attack
on Pearl Harbor
, when war on Japan was declared by Congress on December 8.
Germany
and Italy
declared war on the United States three days
later. The United States subscribed to the Allied plan of
making German defeat the priority, where it operated in
coordination with the United Kingdom in most major operations.
However, it also maintained a strong effort against Japan, being
the primary Allied power in the Pacific Theatre. The U.S. played an
important role in providing valuable industrial production to
support the Allied war effort. After the war, the United States
retained military commitments to European security while providing
economic investment to rebuild nations suffering devastation during
the war.
Politically, the U.S. became the leader of
the western Allies in forming NATO
, and hosts
the United Nations in which it gained
one of the permanent seats on the Security Council.
Uruguay
Uruguay
was neutral for most of World War II,
although later joined the Allies. It declared its neutrality
on September 4, 1939, although
President Alfredo Baldomir was poorly disposed
towards the Axis powers. Uruguay's neutrality included a
500-kilometre (300-mi) exclusion zone extending from its coast,
established as part of the Declaration of Panama.
Neither side of the
conflict acknowledged the exclusion zones established by the
declaration, and in December, British warships and the German ship
Admiral Graf Spee
fought a battle not far off Uruguay's
coast. This prompted a joint protest from several Latin
American nations to both sides.
(Admiral Graf Spee took refuge in
Uruguay's capital, Montevideo
, claiming sanctuary in a neutral port, but was
later ordered out.) Later, in early 1942, President Baldomir broke
off diplomatic relations with the Axis Powers. On February
15, 1945, near the end of the war, Uruguay dropped its policy of
neutrality and joined the Allies.
It should also be noted that Uruguayan pilots, along with
volunteers from other countries, joined the
Free French Forces.
Vatican City
Vatican City
, at 0.44 km2 the
smallest autonomous country in the world, was neutral and remained
unoccupied throughout the war. However, the Italians, and
later, the Germans, blockaded the state and occasionally harassed
the citizens within. The Vatican was a refuge for a small number of
Jews. It was a site of political debate and communications between
the belligerent sides.
During the bombings of Rome
, both
sides were instructed by their commanders to not bomb the
state. However, whether accidentally or not, a single German
bomber dropped four bombs on the Vatican on 5 November 1943,
destroying a mosaic and blasting out the windows of the cupola of
St. Peter's Basilica.
Venezuela
After
the attack on Pearl Harbor, Venezuela
severed diplomatic relations with
Italy, Germany, and Japan, and after implementing (with help from
the United States) defenses on the oil wells (there was information
that Germany had plans to invade the American continent from
Venezuela and seize its oil production) produced vast oil supplies
for the Allies. It maintained a relative neutrality until
the last years of war, when it finally declared war on Germany and
the rest of the Axis countries.
Wales
Yemen
The
Mutawakkilite
Kingdom of Yemen, which occupied the northern portion
of modern Yemen
, followed an isolationist foreign policy under
King Yahya Muhammad Hamid
ed-Din. It formed an alliance with Italy in 1936, and
yet it remained neutral for the duration of the war. The southern
portion of modern Yemen, known as the
Aden Protectorate, was under British
control.
Yugoslavia
The Axis Powers occupied Yugoslavia in 1941 and created several
puppet states.
The Independent State of Croatia
was a German and Italian puppet
state. The
Nedić's Serbia
was a German client state.
The Kingdom
of Montenegro
was an Italian puppet state from 1941
to 1943 and a German puppet state from 1943 to 1944. Other
parts of Yugoslavia were occupied directly by Germany, Italy,
Bulgaria and Hungary.
Yugoslavs opposing the Nazis organized resistance movement
People's Liberating Army of
Yugoslavia (NOVJ), led by
Josip Broz
Tito and
Communist Party of
Yugoslavia.
Communist
Anti-Fascist Council of National
Liberation of Yugoslavia was convened in
Jajce in 1943 and established the basis for post-war
organization of the country as a federative republic.
After heavy
bloodshed in the war which was at the same time liberation, ethnic
and civil war, Yugoslavia was reestablished in 1945, expanding
territories on areas previously ruled by Kingdom of Italy (Istria
and parts of Dalmatia).
Near the end of the war, Western governments attempted to reconcile
the partisans and the government-in-exile loyal to the king, which
led to the
Tito-Šubašić Agreement
in June 1944 but, effectively, Communist Party gained the exclusive
power in post-war state. After the war, General Mihailović and
other royalists were rounded-up and executed for collaboration with
the Nazis. Mihailović was posthumously awarded the
Legion of Merit by President
Harry S. Truman.
See also
References
Further reading
- Nazi Germany and Neutral Europe During the Second World
War by Christian Leitz
- Neither Friend Nor Foe: The European Neutrals in World War
II by Jerrold M. Packard