Military Tactics During Ww2

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Military strategy and tactics are key to conducting successful warfare. Strategy consist of coordination, crucial planning, and for military operations to meet overall goal/objectives. While tactics, integrate strategy with short-term decisions on the movement/employment of forces and weapons on the battlefield. WW2 was a very extensive war covering large territories in Europe as well as other continents. The war involved mass deployment of men and resources. There cannot be one strategy or tactic considered when reviewing both sides. Through a variety of different strategies and tactics, in WW2, you see the initial success of the Axis military tactics, but in the long run the Allies strategies would prevail. During WW2 the Axis focused their …show more content…

The tide began to change with the stalemate in the Battle of Britain, and Hitler not being able to secure peace with Russia in the east. The Battle drained German resources, and with the “Blitz” coming to an end, they needed to transfer planes to eastern front, which just caused for over-stretched resources, due to large territories. Soviets, initially losing the fight, made a remarkable recovery, which would play a key turning point in the war. Soviets used their winter as an advantage, which was terribly more severe than anything the German had encountered. Germans were ill-prepared for such conditions, and severed from it. Also, with Russian having such a big population it could replenish the troops they lost more quickly than the Germans. Soviets would also employ two-man sniper teams. Allies would launch aerial attacks on factories, cities, and lines of supply and communication. They also use deception like Operation Fortitude, to which they would make Germans believe the Allied invasion would come as Pas de Calais, while the real invasion would be at the beaches of Normandy. USA would use code talkers in the pacific, who were known as Windtalkers or Navajo Code Talkers. They played a significant role in the war and victory in the Pacific, and their code was never broken by the Japanese. To avoid sending anymore troops into the pacific and land on the beaches of Japan, President Truman demanded that the Japanese government surrender unconditionally. When they refused, Truman approved a direct authorization of the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japanese cities. Thus, the strategy of the Allies through operations, code, planning, and patience lead to their overall

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