DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, May 5, 2015 – When President Harry S Truman,
British Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin
simultaneously announced that Nazi Germany had surrendered on May 8, 1945, the
joy Americans felt was tempered by where they were.
The war that began with Germany invading Poland Sept. 1,
1939, ended with the total defeat of the Nazi menace and the unconditional
surrender of the German military.
In New York, London and Moscow the eruption of joy was
instantaneous. Men and women rushed to the streets to hug and kiss and dance.
The war against Nazi Germany was over. The killing had stopped. A great evil
ended.
The End of a Long Road
On the front lines deep in Germany, Austria and
Czechoslovakia, the celebration was more muted, with soldiers gradually
realizing they were not going to be shot at anymore and were going to go home.
Their joy was further tempered because, while Germany was
defeated, Japan fought on. The soldiers realized their divisions, brigades and
units would be part of the invasion of Japan.
In the Pacific, there was a brief acknowledgement that the
European battle was over, but it didn’t really matter to the soldiers and
Marines who were still attacking Japanese positions on Okinawa or to the
sailors who were fending off kamikaze attacks on ships off the island.
VE Day signified the end of a long road. Just between June
1944 and May 8, 1945, there were 552,117 U.S. casualties in the European
theater of operations. Of those, 104,812 were killed in action.
In January 1945, many believed the war in Europe would last
much longer.
In January, U.S. Army soldiers were still battling against
German forces that had launched the Battle of the Bulge. That battle was the
largest the U.S. Army ever fought and out of the 90,000 casualties around
19,000 soldiers were killed.
Events accelerated from there.
The War Moves into Germany
Bombing missions continued over Germany and every B-17 or B-24
lost over the Reich meant a loss of 10 Americans. On the ground, Allied troops
mopped up German resistance on the west bank of the Rhine River.
On March 7, 1945, soldiers from the 9th Armored Division
secured the Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine River in Remagen, Germany. The
U.S. 1st Army vaulted the water barrier and struck deep into Germany. The 3rd
Army also crossed the river and moved on. On March 22, U.S. and British forces
launch a massive operation over the Rhine in Oppenheim.
On April 2, U.S. forces surrounded 600,000 Germans in the
Ruhr Pocket. Throughout the month, American forces begin discovering the
consequences of the Nazi ideology as they liberated death camps like
Buchenwald, Ohrdurf and Dachau.
On April 12, Americans were shocked by the death of
President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Harry S Truman was sworn in and vowed to
continue Roosevelt’s policies.
On April 21, Soviet forces began their assault on the German
capital of Berlin.
With the Soviets closing in, Hitler committed suicide on
April 30 and turns power over to Admiral Karl Donitz.
Surrender
On May 2, German forces in Berlin surrendered to the
Soviets.
On May 7, formal negotiations for Germany’s surrender began
at the Supreme headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force headquarters in Rheims,
France, and the Germans surrender unconditionally the next day.
At the conclusion of the surrender, the allied staff
attempted to write a message for General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower to
send to allied leaders. He opted for “The mission of this Allied Force was
fulfilled at 0241, May 7th, 1945.”
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