Preface to the Third Edition ix
Chapter One. To Pearl Harbor: The United States and World Crisis 1
The Arsenal of Democracy: The War in Europe 3
“Not Enough Ships": The Effort to Restrain Japan 8
Chapter Two. Allied Defeats and the Axis Ascendancy, 1941-1942 20
The Nazi Empire at Its Peak 20
Japan’s Imperial Conquests 24
Defeat and Surrender in the Philippines 25
Popular Perceptions and Expectations 34
Chapter Three. The War in Europe: The Turn of the Tide 38
The Debate over Strategy 38
The North African Invasion 41
The Eastern Front: The Russian Victory at Stalingrad 45
The Battle of the Atlantic 49
The Air War: The Bombing of Germany 51
The Cross-Channel Invasion: D-Day 53
Chapter Four. The Pacific Theater: The War against Japan, 1942-1945 59
“Our War”: Characteristics and Popular Perceptions 61
Midway: The End of Japan’s Naval Invincibility 65
Guadalcanal: The First Offensive 69
The Island Campaign, 1943-1944 72
Iwo Jima and Okinawa 79
Japan 1945: The Refusal to Surrender 84
Chapter Five. The Diplomatic Front: Roosevelt and the American Vision of the Postwar World 87
The United Nations 90
Soviet-American Cooperation 92
China’s International Status 98
The End of Colonialism 102
Chapter Six. The Dilemmas of Victory 109
Victory in Europe and the Extent of Nazi Tyranny 110
“The Greatest Thing in History”: The Atomic Bomb and Japan’s Surrender 114
Hiroshima and Magasaki: The Lingering Questions 117
A People Victorious: America at the End of the War 125
Conclusion: Why the Allies Won 127
Bibliographical Essay 146
Index 167
Photographs follow page 86
Maps:
Europe under the Axis 21
Japan’s Empire, 1942 26
Allied Offensives, 1942-1945 39
U.S. Offensive against Japan 60
Gary R. Hess is an Emeritus Distinguished ResearchProfessor of History at Bowling Green State University. Hisresearch and teaching interests focused on U.S. foreign relationsfrom World War II to the present. He is the author of severalbooks, including most recently: Presidential Decisions forWar (rev. ed., 2009); and Vietnam: ExplainingAmerica s Lost War (2008). He has been a four-timeFulbright Scholar/Lecturer in India. He is a past president of boththe Society for Historians of American Foreign Realtions and theOhio Academy of History. Both organizations recognized hisscholarly and service contributions through their Norman and LauraGraebner Award and Distinguished Historian Award, respectively.
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