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Wwii: the American Experience

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Wwii: the American Experience
World War II: The American Experience
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World War II: The American Experience
The causes for American involvement in the war turned the ties of the war on the Allies favor. Even though America wanted peace and did not want aggression by other nations, Roosevelt “officially ended the country’s
isolationist stance by passing the Lend Lease Act, which lifted restrictions on supporting
foreign troops with defense gear; the Act first appropriated $7 billion to lend or lease
supplies to any countries the president designated. President Roosevelt also started to call
US National Guard members to war training” ("Causes Of Us Involvement In World War II", 2012) in 1941 for the obvious storm that lay ahead.
Normandy Campaign Objectives The main objective of the Normandy Campaign was to bring the war to an end. It was the biggest invasion in the history of warfare. The U.S. along with her Allies participated in this gigantic onslaught against Hitler’s Germany. All major Allied counties participated in this crusade.
Why Normandy beaches?
Because the British forces had been based in southeast and eastern England to prepare for a threat of German invasion in 1940, left the final decision to land the American forces on the western invasion beaches of Normandy. D-Day
Among the objectives on D-Day, the beach code-named Omaha was the best fortified. Allied commanders felt it had to be taken nonetheless, to dislodge the Germans dug in between Utah Beach to the west, also assigned to the Americans, and the British-targeted beaches code-named Gold, Juno, and Sword to the east. “At Omaha Beach, the Americans came ashore under intense fire and took the heaviest casualties in the battle, landing about 40,000 men, with 2,200 killed or wounded” ("Photos: The 65th Anniversary Of D-Day On The Normandy Beaches", 2009). Airborne Assault
“The decision to launch the airborne attack on D-Day in darkness instead of waiting for first light was probably one of the few



References: Causes of US Involvement in World War II. (2012). Retrieved from http://www.articlenotes.com/pub/articles/history/us-history/causes-of-us-involvement-in-world-war-ii-11077.htm Photos: The 65th Anniversary of D-Day on the Normandy Beaches. (2009). Retrieved from http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2009/06/05/the-65th-anniversary-of-d-day-on-the-normandy-beaches/

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