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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,130 --> 00:00:09,101 - ♪ 2 00:00:12,012 --> 00:00:15,061 - MALE NARRATOR: December 7, 1941... 3 00:00:15,140 --> 00:00:19,520 the turmoil of World War ll enters its 27th month. 4 00:00:19,603 --> 00:00:22,732 Japanese troops storm Shanghai. 5 00:00:24,566 --> 00:00:26,944 German armies stand at the gates of Moscow, 6 00:00:27,027 --> 00:00:30,281 leaving 6½ million casualties in their wake. 7 00:00:31,990 --> 00:00:35,494 Nazi Germany has mainland Europe in its grip. 8 00:00:37,579 --> 00:00:39,331 Under siege, 9 00:00:39,414 --> 00:00:42,463 Britain hangs on by a thread. 10 00:00:44,294 --> 00:00:45,841 Three-thousand miles away, 11 00:00:45,921 --> 00:00:48,299 the United States remains at peace. 12 00:00:48,382 --> 00:00:50,350 Seventy-six percent of her citizens 13 00:00:50,425 --> 00:00:52,018 support neutrality. 14 00:00:54,680 --> 00:00:58,685 At 7:55 a.m., the peace is shattered. 15 00:01:02,771 --> 00:01:05,149 Three hundred sixty Japanese warplanes 16 00:01:05,232 --> 00:01:07,485 descend on Pearl Harbor. 17 00:01:12,739 --> 00:01:16,334 World War ll has come to America. 18 00:01:22,040 --> 00:01:25,089 This is America's war as never seen before... 19 00:01:27,296 --> 00:01:29,970 from the unique vantage point of space. 20 00:01:34,636 --> 00:01:37,981 Witness the key battles unfold... 21 00:01:38,056 --> 00:01:40,024 and the military strategies behind them, 22 00:01:40,100 --> 00:01:42,273 in stunning detail. 23 00:01:42,352 --> 00:01:45,481 Revealed are the political alliances, 24 00:01:45,564 --> 00:01:48,033 the global battle for resources, 25 00:01:48,108 --> 00:01:49,701 and the astounding awakening 26 00:01:49,776 --> 00:01:52,245 of American military and manufacturing might 27 00:01:54,406 --> 00:01:56,283 that will determine the outcome 28 00:01:56,366 --> 00:01:58,915 of the greatest conflict ever fought. 29 00:01:58,994 --> 00:02:02,965 - ♪ 30 00:02:04,000 --> 00:02:10,074 The Venom - $5 million GTD Poker Tourney Download AmericasCardroom.com 31 00:02:12,299 --> 00:02:15,052 - NARRATOR: The unprovoked Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor 32 00:02:15,135 --> 00:02:18,105 will send shock waves across the globe, 33 00:02:18,180 --> 00:02:21,525 but America has feared a strike for months. 34 00:02:23,268 --> 00:02:26,898 Since 1931, Japan's imperial ambitions 35 00:02:26,980 --> 00:02:29,483 have grown bolder and bolder. 36 00:02:29,566 --> 00:02:31,534 First, Manchuria is invaded, 37 00:02:31,610 --> 00:02:34,204 then China itself. 38 00:02:34,279 --> 00:02:37,783 When France falls to Nazi Germany in 1940, 39 00:02:37,866 --> 00:02:41,712 Japan seizes control of French Indochina. 40 00:02:41,787 --> 00:02:44,540 The US response is rapid. 41 00:02:44,623 --> 00:02:46,751 Japan's financial assets are frozen 42 00:02:46,833 --> 00:02:49,336 and an oil embargo is imposed. 43 00:02:49,419 --> 00:02:51,342 The message is clear-- 44 00:02:51,421 --> 00:02:55,426 withdraw from Indochina or be economically crushed. 45 00:02:55,509 --> 00:02:56,726 - After the embargo, 46 00:02:56,802 --> 00:02:58,725 Japan was faced with two choices-- 47 00:02:58,804 --> 00:03:00,898 stop territorial expansion-- 48 00:03:00,972 --> 00:03:02,599 give into the demands of the Allies-- 49 00:03:02,683 --> 00:03:04,435 or go to war. 50 00:03:04,518 --> 00:03:07,738 - NARRATOR: Japan chooses War. 51 00:03:07,813 --> 00:03:10,066 In the words of Prime Minister Tojo, 52 00:03:10,148 --> 00:03:13,448 "it is either glory or decline." 53 00:03:13,527 --> 00:03:15,746 it is imperative that they make 54 00:03:15,821 --> 00:03:18,370 the first, decisive strike. 55 00:03:22,035 --> 00:03:24,208 - The Japanese knew they were never gonna go 56 00:03:24,287 --> 00:03:26,039 toe-to-toe with the United States 57 00:03:26,123 --> 00:03:27,750 in a long Naval war in the Pacific. 58 00:03:27,833 --> 00:03:29,460 They knew they didn't have the economic might-- 59 00:03:29,543 --> 00:03:32,012 the military might-- but it was a calculation 60 00:03:32,087 --> 00:03:34,715 that they could administer a knock-out blow 61 00:03:34,798 --> 00:03:37,847 to the capital ships of the US Pacific Fleet. 62 00:03:37,926 --> 00:03:39,724 - If you could destroy the Pacific Fleet, 63 00:03:39,803 --> 00:03:41,803 the ability of the Americans to respond to anything 64 00:03:41,847 --> 00:03:45,727 for many months would be taken away. 65 00:03:45,809 --> 00:03:47,607 So the strike at Pearl Harbor 66 00:03:47,686 --> 00:03:50,485 was not just a strike at a symbol of American power. 67 00:03:50,564 --> 00:03:53,659 It was American power in the Pacific. 68 00:03:53,734 --> 00:03:55,828 - NARRATOR: What American intelligence cannot see 69 00:03:55,902 --> 00:03:58,872 is revealed from space. 70 00:03:58,947 --> 00:04:01,450 Admiral Yamamoto's fleet departs Japan 71 00:04:01,533 --> 00:04:04,707 on the longest assault in history. 72 00:04:04,786 --> 00:04:07,084 Avoiding shipping lanes and landmass, 73 00:04:07,164 --> 00:04:08,916 they arrive unseen, 74 00:04:08,999 --> 00:04:12,344 275 miles from their target. 75 00:04:12,419 --> 00:04:14,387 It's the perfect vantage point-- 76 00:04:14,463 --> 00:04:17,216 beyond the range of America's defensive radar, 77 00:04:17,299 --> 00:04:19,301 but at the optimum strike distance 78 00:04:19,384 --> 00:04:23,230 for its force of 414 cutting-edge aircraft, 79 00:04:23,305 --> 00:04:25,774 the jewel in the crown... 80 00:04:25,849 --> 00:04:27,567 the Mitsubishi Zero. 81 00:04:27,642 --> 00:04:29,610 - MAN 1: it's faster than anything 82 00:04:29,686 --> 00:04:31,233 that they've used before. 83 00:04:31,313 --> 00:04:34,817 It's incredibly maneuverable and it has extreme range. 84 00:04:34,900 --> 00:04:37,653 But while the technology was pretty good, 85 00:04:37,736 --> 00:04:42,162 what mattered at Pearl Harbor was the man behind it. 86 00:04:42,240 --> 00:04:44,868 It was the pilot. 87 00:04:44,951 --> 00:04:48,376 The Japanese pilots have already been at war for years, 88 00:04:48,455 --> 00:04:52,585 so they're well-trained crews. 89 00:04:52,667 --> 00:04:54,135 You add on top of that, 90 00:04:54,211 --> 00:04:56,885 they'd been planning that attack for a long period of time. 91 00:04:56,963 --> 00:04:59,887 So they'd been running war games, simulating it, 92 00:04:59,966 --> 00:05:01,968 going through the action again and again, 93 00:05:02,052 --> 00:05:03,895 so that, basically, many of them talked 94 00:05:03,970 --> 00:05:06,974 about how they could have done it going in blind. 95 00:05:07,057 --> 00:05:10,186 - NARRATOR: At 7:55 a.m., the first wave of bombers 96 00:05:10,268 --> 00:05:12,020 swoop from the sky. 97 00:05:12,103 --> 00:05:14,572 - [plane engine whines] 98 00:05:14,648 --> 00:05:16,650 - On the deck of USS Arizona 99 00:05:16,733 --> 00:05:19,577 is Don Stratton. 100 00:05:19,653 --> 00:05:22,873 - We knew right away that there were Japanese planes, 101 00:05:22,948 --> 00:05:27,169 and we knew that they were bombing Ford island, 102 00:05:27,244 --> 00:05:29,588 and something was radically wrong. 103 00:05:29,663 --> 00:05:34,214 - [plane engines zooming] 104 00:05:34,292 --> 00:05:36,636 - DON: Planes were strafing and dive-bombing, 105 00:05:36,711 --> 00:05:40,591 and it was just a horrible experience 106 00:05:40,674 --> 00:05:43,518 and a horrible sight. 107 00:05:43,593 --> 00:05:48,019 - [eerie music, bombs exploding] 108 00:05:52,519 --> 00:05:54,192 - DON: it was a high-altitude bomber, 109 00:05:54,271 --> 00:05:57,366 dropped like a 2,000-lb bomb. 110 00:05:57,440 --> 00:06:00,660 I mean, it just devastated everything in its path, 111 00:06:00,735 --> 00:06:03,158 and the concussion 112 00:06:03,238 --> 00:06:06,492 and the smoke and the fire 113 00:06:06,575 --> 00:06:08,748 was horrendous. 114 00:06:08,827 --> 00:06:13,173 - [eerie music continues] 115 00:06:13,248 --> 00:06:16,673 - It just was like... 116 00:06:16,751 --> 00:06:18,594 you'd lost your home. 117 00:06:22,048 --> 00:06:23,728 - NARRATOR: Of eight battleships at anchor, 118 00:06:23,800 --> 00:06:25,552 the Arizona, Oklahoma, 119 00:06:25,635 --> 00:06:28,514 West Virginia, and California are sunk-- 120 00:06:28,597 --> 00:06:30,850 the rest severely damaged. 121 00:06:30,932 --> 00:06:32,434 In 68 minutes, 122 00:06:32,517 --> 00:06:37,193 Japan has crippled the heart of America's Pacific Fleet. 123 00:06:37,272 --> 00:06:38,990 - From a Japanese perspective, 124 00:06:39,065 --> 00:06:41,409 the attack on Pearl Harbor succeeded 125 00:06:41,484 --> 00:06:44,488 beyond the most optimistic expectations. 126 00:06:44,571 --> 00:06:46,369 When you consider the losses 127 00:06:46,448 --> 00:06:48,291 that the Japanese suffered in this attack, 128 00:06:48,366 --> 00:06:50,414 it was essentially nothing. 129 00:06:50,493 --> 00:06:52,996 - NARRATOR: The Japanese lose 64 men 130 00:06:53,079 --> 00:06:57,550 to 3,649 US casualties-- 131 00:06:57,626 --> 00:07:03,178 a human damage ratio of 57 to 1. 132 00:07:03,256 --> 00:07:05,258 But Japan's margin of victory 133 00:07:05,342 --> 00:07:08,471 hides two major flaws in the attack. 134 00:07:08,553 --> 00:07:10,897 - The Japanese failed to systemically attack 135 00:07:10,972 --> 00:07:12,519 the oil fields-- 136 00:07:12,599 --> 00:07:15,022 the oil storage tanks at Pearl Harbor. 137 00:07:15,101 --> 00:07:17,354 If they'd spent one more sortie 138 00:07:17,437 --> 00:07:18,984 taking out those oil tanks, 139 00:07:19,064 --> 00:07:21,032 they would have crippled the whole Pacific Fleet, 140 00:07:21,107 --> 00:07:24,327 which wouldn't have had the fuel supplies to keep going. 141 00:07:24,402 --> 00:07:26,325 - NARRATOR: More significant are the ships 142 00:07:26,404 --> 00:07:27,872 the Japanese fail to target. 143 00:07:27,948 --> 00:07:29,541 - PROF. KENNEDY: The American aircraft carriers 144 00:07:29,616 --> 00:07:31,289 were absent from Pearl Harbor 145 00:07:31,368 --> 00:07:33,496 at the time of the Japanese attack. 146 00:07:33,578 --> 00:07:35,626 And as things evolved very quickly, 147 00:07:35,705 --> 00:07:37,628 it became clear that the aircraft carrier 148 00:07:37,707 --> 00:07:40,426 was destined to become the most significant naval asset 149 00:07:40,502 --> 00:07:42,596 for either side in the Pacific war, 150 00:07:42,671 --> 00:07:45,140 and the American carriers were untouched. 151 00:07:47,509 --> 00:07:50,513 - NARRATOR: Oil supplies and air domination-- 152 00:07:50,595 --> 00:07:54,475 two factors that will dictate the fate of World War ll, 153 00:07:54,557 --> 00:07:59,108 and Japan fails to damage either... 154 00:07:59,187 --> 00:08:01,815 instead, it has awoken the full wrath 155 00:08:01,898 --> 00:08:04,697 of the sleeping American giant. 156 00:08:04,776 --> 00:08:09,703 - [dramatic orchestral music] 157 00:08:09,781 --> 00:08:12,125 - DR. CRANE: Pearl Harbor infuriated the American people. 158 00:08:12,200 --> 00:08:14,328 It also infuriated the American military-- 159 00:08:14,411 --> 00:08:17,711 massive casualties, destruction of most of the Pacific Fleet. 160 00:08:17,789 --> 00:08:20,383 If you wanted to do one thing to unite a country 161 00:08:20,458 --> 00:08:23,211 that before this had been rather divided 162 00:08:23,294 --> 00:08:25,797 about what to do about the war, Pearl Harbor was it. 163 00:08:25,880 --> 00:08:27,974 - This was like a lightning rod 164 00:08:28,049 --> 00:08:30,017 throughout the American population. 165 00:08:30,093 --> 00:08:32,221 No longer was President Roosevelt 166 00:08:32,303 --> 00:08:34,476 limited in his options. 167 00:08:34,556 --> 00:08:37,435 He had a United States population 168 00:08:37,517 --> 00:08:40,612 that was angry and unified 169 00:08:40,687 --> 00:08:44,237 and desired revenge against Japan. 170 00:08:44,315 --> 00:08:47,285 - NARRATOR: Her era of isolationism is over. 171 00:08:47,360 --> 00:08:49,362 America is at war 172 00:08:49,446 --> 00:08:51,323 and begins its rise to become 173 00:08:51,406 --> 00:08:54,080 the most powerful nation on the planet. 174 00:08:58,955 --> 00:09:00,878 Washington calculates victory 175 00:09:00,957 --> 00:09:04,131 will cost $300 billion-- 176 00:09:04,210 --> 00:09:07,555 $4.4 trillion in today's money-- 177 00:09:07,630 --> 00:09:11,351 over 1½ times the total US federal budget. 178 00:09:13,636 --> 00:09:16,856 The government can raise half through increased taxes. 179 00:09:16,931 --> 00:09:19,980 For the rest, it must turn to the public. 180 00:09:20,060 --> 00:09:21,562 - MAN 2: To raise $300 billion 181 00:09:21,644 --> 00:09:23,942 was then viewed as an insurmountable challenge, 182 00:09:24,022 --> 00:09:26,320 because basically we had to get 183 00:09:26,399 --> 00:09:28,151 half of the population of the United States 184 00:09:28,234 --> 00:09:30,111 to buy bonds. 185 00:09:30,195 --> 00:09:32,698 And what we were saying is we're in World War ll, 186 00:09:32,781 --> 00:09:33,907 we're in this to win, 187 00:09:33,990 --> 00:09:35,617 it's a fight of good versus evil, 188 00:09:35,700 --> 00:09:37,543 and you on an individual level 189 00:09:37,619 --> 00:09:39,872 are gonna make a difference. 190 00:09:39,954 --> 00:09:41,581 - NARRATOR: To guarantee success, 191 00:09:41,664 --> 00:09:43,712 the ad men of New York recruit 192 00:09:43,792 --> 00:09:47,592 America's most potent propaganda asset. 193 00:09:47,670 --> 00:09:50,469 - We had the Hollywood machine. 194 00:09:50,548 --> 00:09:52,676 America had mass-marketed movies. 195 00:09:52,759 --> 00:09:54,039 They knew the power of Hollywood. 196 00:09:54,052 --> 00:09:56,180 They knew the power of celebrities. 197 00:09:56,262 --> 00:09:58,640 - NARRATOR: Over 300 movie icons 198 00:09:58,723 --> 00:10:02,023 join the "Stars Over America" campaign 199 00:10:02,102 --> 00:10:04,275 crisscrossing the nation. 200 00:10:04,354 --> 00:10:06,823 Chicago... two huge celebrity rallies 201 00:10:06,898 --> 00:10:10,243 sell over $15 million in bonds. 202 00:10:10,318 --> 00:10:12,537 New York... a 3-way baseball game 203 00:10:12,612 --> 00:10:14,865 generates $56 million. 204 00:10:14,948 --> 00:10:16,621 By the end of the war, 205 00:10:16,699 --> 00:10:23,503 bonds campaigns raise $187.5 billion. 206 00:10:23,581 --> 00:10:26,334 - BOB: To get everybody aligned behind one goal 207 00:10:26,417 --> 00:10:29,591 and make the transaction is--is huge. 208 00:10:29,671 --> 00:10:31,844 - NARRATOR: America and its beleaguered Allies 209 00:10:31,923 --> 00:10:35,052 are going to need every cent. 210 00:10:37,178 --> 00:10:39,772 Four days after Pearl Harbor, 211 00:10:39,848 --> 00:10:43,898 Nazi Germany declares war on the United States. 212 00:10:43,977 --> 00:10:47,698 She now faces two vast and battle-hardened powers 213 00:10:47,772 --> 00:10:50,946 on two fronts. 214 00:10:51,025 --> 00:10:52,698 - MAN 3: When America entered the war, 215 00:10:52,777 --> 00:10:57,328 it looked as if the military aggressors were going to win. 216 00:10:57,407 --> 00:11:00,911 - NARRATOR: Seen from space, America's peril is clear. 217 00:11:00,994 --> 00:11:02,837 Her fleet is in disarray, 218 00:11:02,912 --> 00:11:07,463 and her Pacific assets at the mercy of a rampant Japan. 219 00:11:07,542 --> 00:11:09,294 On the other side of the planet, 220 00:11:09,377 --> 00:11:11,050 her strongest military ally, 221 00:11:11,129 --> 00:11:12,221 Great Britain, 222 00:11:12,297 --> 00:11:14,766 is buckling under siege from Nazi Germany. 223 00:11:16,926 --> 00:11:18,678 America is at the epicenter 224 00:11:18,761 --> 00:11:21,856 of the greatest conflict in history. 225 00:11:21,931 --> 00:11:25,276 Roosevelt must make the biggest call of any US presidency-- 226 00:11:25,351 --> 00:11:29,197 which enemy to engage first. 227 00:11:29,272 --> 00:11:30,945 - DR. CRANE: Franklin Delano Roosevelt decided 228 00:11:31,024 --> 00:11:33,152 that Germany was the one that could take down 229 00:11:33,234 --> 00:11:35,703 our closest friends around the world. 230 00:11:35,778 --> 00:11:39,248 They had to make sure that Britain survived. 231 00:11:39,324 --> 00:11:42,749 - Keeping Britain afloat was essential 232 00:11:42,827 --> 00:11:46,673 to the long-term prospects of victory. 233 00:11:46,748 --> 00:11:49,217 It stood as a large aircraft carrier 234 00:11:49,292 --> 00:11:52,466 that would enable an invasion onto the continent. 235 00:11:52,545 --> 00:11:55,094 If Britain fell under Nazi domination, 236 00:11:55,173 --> 00:11:58,347 the challenge would be almost insurmountable. 237 00:11:58,426 --> 00:11:59,723 - NARRATOR: For Roosevelt, 238 00:11:59,802 --> 00:12:02,806 the future of Great Britain is the future of the war. 239 00:12:02,889 --> 00:12:05,438 But after 17 months of fighting alone, 240 00:12:05,516 --> 00:12:08,315 its survival rests on a knife edge. 241 00:12:11,689 --> 00:12:13,532 Isolated, Britain's only hope 242 00:12:13,608 --> 00:12:15,610 is to keep her supply routes open-- 243 00:12:15,693 --> 00:12:18,321 a fragile lifeline German Admiral Doenitz 244 00:12:18,404 --> 00:12:20,782 seeks to destroy. 245 00:12:20,865 --> 00:12:23,038 - Britain depended on the import 246 00:12:23,117 --> 00:12:27,418 of 5 million tons of stuff every month. 247 00:12:27,497 --> 00:12:29,966 German Admiral Doenitz argued very persuasively 248 00:12:30,041 --> 00:12:32,920 that if we can subtract a million tons a month, 249 00:12:33,002 --> 00:12:34,925 we will bring Britain to its knees. 250 00:12:35,004 --> 00:12:38,634 - NARRATOR: Doenitz' lethal weapon is the U-boat. 251 00:12:38,716 --> 00:12:41,640 Capable of traveling thousands of miles submerged 252 00:12:41,719 --> 00:12:43,813 and armed with a deadly cocktail 253 00:12:43,888 --> 00:12:47,313 of deck guns, mines and torpedoes, 254 00:12:47,392 --> 00:12:49,019 it is the perfect weapon 255 00:12:49,102 --> 00:12:51,196 to starve Britain into submission. 256 00:12:51,271 --> 00:12:52,773 - When they attack, they're sending 257 00:12:52,855 --> 00:12:55,529 over 9,000 tons of supplies 258 00:12:55,608 --> 00:12:57,827 to the bottom of the ocean 259 00:12:57,902 --> 00:12:59,779 with 1 munition--1 torpedo. 260 00:12:59,862 --> 00:13:01,284 And when it detonates, it creates 261 00:13:01,364 --> 00:13:03,037 this void underneath the vessel 262 00:13:03,116 --> 00:13:05,585 that creates the vessel to collapse 263 00:13:05,660 --> 00:13:08,755 - it's the difference between being stabbed 264 00:13:08,830 --> 00:13:11,549 and someone breaking your back. 265 00:13:11,624 --> 00:13:13,376 It's a killer. 266 00:13:15,044 --> 00:13:17,422 - NARRATOR: Churchill introduces naval convoys 267 00:13:17,505 --> 00:13:20,304 to protect the merchant fleets. 268 00:13:20,383 --> 00:13:23,307 Doenitz' response is devastating. 269 00:13:23,386 --> 00:13:25,426 - PROF. WAWRO: Admiral Doenitz introduced this thing 270 00:13:25,430 --> 00:13:27,728 called "rudel" tactic-- wolf pack tactic. 271 00:13:27,807 --> 00:13:29,730 A rudel is a pack of animals, 272 00:13:29,809 --> 00:13:31,777 and instead of approaching singly, 273 00:13:31,853 --> 00:13:33,605 as submarines had done in the past, 274 00:13:33,688 --> 00:13:35,611 the Germans would have their U-boats 275 00:13:35,690 --> 00:13:38,159 strung out in these long patrol lines 276 00:13:38,234 --> 00:13:41,408 and then they would use radio signals to congregate in a pack 277 00:13:41,487 --> 00:13:44,787 and overwhelm the defenses of the convoy. 278 00:13:44,866 --> 00:13:47,210 - The results are devastating. 279 00:13:47,285 --> 00:13:49,379 When you get caught by a pack of these, 280 00:13:49,454 --> 00:13:52,048 you might lose half or more of the convoy. 281 00:13:55,793 --> 00:13:57,386 - NARRATOR: In 12 months, 282 00:13:57,462 --> 00:14:00,056 900 ships are sunk. 283 00:14:00,131 --> 00:14:03,226 Only 29 U-boats are destroyed. 284 00:14:03,301 --> 00:14:07,272 It's a war of attrition Britain is losing fast. 285 00:14:07,347 --> 00:14:10,351 - Winston Churchill knows one big thing in 1940-- 286 00:14:10,433 --> 00:14:12,561 that for Britain to be able to fight this war, 287 00:14:12,643 --> 00:14:15,021 it needs American help-- it can't do it alone. 288 00:14:18,024 --> 00:14:20,527 - NARRATOR: Churchill tirelessly lobbies Roosevelt 289 00:14:20,610 --> 00:14:22,658 for American support. 290 00:14:27,408 --> 00:14:30,252 Though officially neutral, Roosevelt cuts a deal. 291 00:14:32,372 --> 00:14:34,875 The US give 50 destroyers to Britain 292 00:14:34,957 --> 00:14:38,461 to keep it in the fight, but at a price. 293 00:14:38,544 --> 00:14:40,137 In return, Britain hands over 294 00:14:40,213 --> 00:14:43,843 eight of its overseas bases to America and dismantles 295 00:14:43,925 --> 00:14:46,303 its preferential trading system with its colonies. 296 00:14:46,386 --> 00:14:48,605 - DR. PORTER: it was a very mixed deal for Britain, 297 00:14:48,679 --> 00:14:50,898 because on the one hand, it helps Britain fight the war. 298 00:14:50,973 --> 00:14:52,566 They couldn't have done it without American support-- 299 00:14:52,642 --> 00:14:54,019 materially. 300 00:14:54,102 --> 00:14:55,695 On the other hand, it accelerates 301 00:14:55,770 --> 00:14:57,647 the collapse of the British Empire-- 302 00:14:57,730 --> 00:14:59,858 makes the Empire more and more unaffordable. 303 00:14:59,941 --> 00:15:02,319 For Winston Churchill, that's a very painful deal, 304 00:15:02,402 --> 00:15:04,370 but one that probably has to be made. 305 00:15:08,533 --> 00:15:12,288 - NARRATOR: December 1941... 306 00:15:12,370 --> 00:15:14,498 America enters the war. 307 00:15:14,580 --> 00:15:17,254 Its first act of aggression is to join Britain 308 00:15:17,333 --> 00:15:19,381 in the Battle of the Atlantic... 309 00:15:19,460 --> 00:15:22,339 a strategy that meets with disaster. 310 00:15:24,006 --> 00:15:26,429 - PETER: When America enters the war, 311 00:15:26,509 --> 00:15:29,137 the Battle of the Atlantic actually takes a turn-- 312 00:15:29,220 --> 00:15:31,564 worse for the Allies. 313 00:15:31,639 --> 00:15:34,313 The amount of Allied shipping that's sunk 314 00:15:34,392 --> 00:15:38,772 goes up by these astronomical amounts. 315 00:15:38,855 --> 00:15:40,823 - NARRATOR: By mid-1942, 316 00:15:40,898 --> 00:15:44,903 2,703 Allied ships are sunk-- 317 00:15:44,986 --> 00:15:48,661 a U-boat kill ratio of 36 to 1. 318 00:15:48,739 --> 00:15:52,960 It's an unsustainable rate of loss. 319 00:15:53,035 --> 00:15:55,584 Even with America fighting alongside, 320 00:15:55,663 --> 00:15:58,837 the liberty of Britain and the freedom of Europe 321 00:15:58,916 --> 00:16:01,385 hang by a thread. 322 00:16:09,177 --> 00:16:11,646 Mid-1942... 323 00:16:11,721 --> 00:16:13,894 Britain remains in the stranglehold 324 00:16:13,973 --> 00:16:16,772 of the German U-boat menace. 325 00:16:16,851 --> 00:16:18,945 American ships coming to its aid 326 00:16:19,020 --> 00:16:23,446 are being destroyed at alarming rates. 327 00:16:23,524 --> 00:16:25,151 To reverse their fortunes, 328 00:16:25,234 --> 00:16:27,202 the Allies must gain the upper hand 329 00:16:27,278 --> 00:16:29,952 in the intelligence war. 330 00:16:30,031 --> 00:16:31,908 - DR. CRANE: The most critical factor 331 00:16:31,991 --> 00:16:34,494 in the Battle of the Atlantic was the exchange of information 332 00:16:34,577 --> 00:16:36,579 between the Americans and the British. 333 00:16:36,662 --> 00:16:38,585 It maximized both the technological 334 00:16:38,664 --> 00:16:41,588 and the intellectual capabilities of both sides. 335 00:16:41,667 --> 00:16:44,261 - NARRATOR: The precedent for this vital collaboration 336 00:16:44,337 --> 00:16:46,260 is the "Tizard Mission," 337 00:16:46,339 --> 00:16:49,343 15 months before the Pearl Harbor attack. 338 00:16:54,388 --> 00:16:57,107 With Nazi invasion seemingly inevitable, 339 00:16:57,183 --> 00:16:58,560 Henry Tizard, 340 00:16:58,643 --> 00:17:00,520 Head of the British Aeronautical Committee, 341 00:17:00,603 --> 00:17:03,072 persuades Churchill to gift America 342 00:17:03,147 --> 00:17:06,276 every scientific innovation Britain holds, 343 00:17:06,359 --> 00:17:09,738 in exchange for access to US production lines. 344 00:17:11,531 --> 00:17:14,455 The blueprints are packed into a single trunk. 345 00:17:14,534 --> 00:17:17,287 Embarking from Britain, it reaches Washington DC 346 00:17:17,370 --> 00:17:19,793 in September 1940. 347 00:17:19,872 --> 00:17:21,419 - DR. PORTER: That box was described 348 00:17:21,499 --> 00:17:22,876 by one American official 349 00:17:22,959 --> 00:17:25,883 as the most important cargo that ever reached its shores. 350 00:17:25,962 --> 00:17:27,722 - NARRATOR: The trunk contains the memorandum 351 00:17:27,755 --> 00:17:29,849 on the feasibility of the atomic bomb, 352 00:17:29,924 --> 00:17:33,849 designs for jet engines, rockets, superchargers, 353 00:17:33,928 --> 00:17:37,808 gyroscopic gun sights, submarine detection devices, 354 00:17:37,890 --> 00:17:40,894 self-sealing fuel tanks, plastic explosives, 355 00:17:40,977 --> 00:17:46,108 and perhaps the most important invention of World War ll... 356 00:17:46,190 --> 00:17:49,285 a working Magnetron Number 12, 357 00:17:49,360 --> 00:17:51,408 an advancement in radar technology 358 00:17:51,487 --> 00:17:53,160 a thousand times more effective 359 00:17:53,239 --> 00:17:55,708 than the best American counterpart. 360 00:17:55,783 --> 00:17:57,535 - This was revolutionary. 361 00:17:57,618 --> 00:18:00,792 You can put it into an aircraft, you can put it on a ship, 362 00:18:00,871 --> 00:18:02,794 then you can take that technology 363 00:18:02,873 --> 00:18:05,592 and take it anywhere on the battle space. 364 00:18:05,668 --> 00:18:07,045 - NARRATOR: American assembly lines 365 00:18:07,128 --> 00:18:08,971 begin mass-producing the device 366 00:18:09,046 --> 00:18:12,892 that will change the course of the war. 367 00:18:12,967 --> 00:18:14,514 Its first challenge... 368 00:18:14,594 --> 00:18:17,768 to close the deadly Mid-Atlantic gap. 369 00:18:17,847 --> 00:18:20,600 From space, the boneyard of Allied shipping 370 00:18:20,683 --> 00:18:23,106 is startlingly revealed. 371 00:18:23,185 --> 00:18:25,426 - DR. CRANE: You can fly missions from the United States, 372 00:18:25,479 --> 00:18:27,857 you can fly missions from Britain, 373 00:18:27,940 --> 00:18:29,863 but you can't quite close everything, 374 00:18:29,942 --> 00:18:32,411 and you've got the mid-Atlantic gap in the middle. 375 00:18:32,486 --> 00:18:36,992 And the U-Boats realize that and concentrate in that area. 376 00:18:37,074 --> 00:18:39,202 - NARRATOR: By April 1943, 377 00:18:39,285 --> 00:18:44,382 3,450 Allied ships have been lost. 378 00:18:44,457 --> 00:18:46,334 But new carriers are launched, 379 00:18:46,417 --> 00:18:48,670 loaded with long-range aircraft, 380 00:18:48,753 --> 00:18:51,256 fitted with the Magnetron Number 12, 381 00:18:51,339 --> 00:18:53,558 and the gap begins to close. 382 00:18:53,633 --> 00:18:56,762 - It turns the Atlantic from this wide mass 383 00:18:56,844 --> 00:18:59,438 in which the U-boat can hide in 384 00:18:59,513 --> 00:19:03,017 to "No I can find you out there." 385 00:19:03,100 --> 00:19:04,647 - NARRATOR: As British code breakers 386 00:19:04,727 --> 00:19:06,604 crack the German Enigma code, 387 00:19:06,687 --> 00:19:09,031 the final piece of the Allied resurgence 388 00:19:09,106 --> 00:19:10,949 falls into place. 389 00:19:11,025 --> 00:19:13,369 And the tactical and technological advantage 390 00:19:13,444 --> 00:19:17,119 is exploited in the convoy battle known as ONS 5. 391 00:19:17,198 --> 00:19:19,792 - PROF. OVERY: Among all the convoy battles, 392 00:19:19,867 --> 00:19:23,121 one of the most important was ONS 5 in April '43, 393 00:19:23,204 --> 00:19:26,083 and it's important, really, because it demonstrated 394 00:19:26,165 --> 00:19:28,918 clearly, I think, how far the Allies had gone. 395 00:19:31,462 --> 00:19:35,092 - NARRATOR: Forty-two ships of the slow-bound ONS 5 convoy 396 00:19:35,174 --> 00:19:38,895 leave Liverpool for Canada. 397 00:19:38,969 --> 00:19:40,141 For Doenitz, 398 00:19:40,221 --> 00:19:42,690 it is a perfect target. 399 00:19:42,765 --> 00:19:44,767 - Doenitz is feeling this great sense of urgency, 400 00:19:44,850 --> 00:19:48,024 like he needs to sink more and more tons of shipping. 401 00:19:48,104 --> 00:19:51,074 And he actually presses his luck in this battle. 402 00:19:54,318 --> 00:19:55,945 - NARRATOR: The first wave of U-boats 403 00:19:56,028 --> 00:19:59,532 sink 13 Allied ships. 404 00:19:59,615 --> 00:20:05,088 But as thick fog falls, the advantage switches. 405 00:20:05,162 --> 00:20:08,041 Armed with the German codes and advanced radar, 406 00:20:08,124 --> 00:20:10,843 the Allies strike back with impunity. 407 00:20:13,796 --> 00:20:15,890 - PROF. WAWRO: Doenitz fights longer than he should, 408 00:20:15,965 --> 00:20:17,808 brings in more U-boats than he should, 409 00:20:17,883 --> 00:20:21,854 which are then, in fact, chewed up by the convoy. 410 00:20:21,929 --> 00:20:23,397 After the battle, Doenitz says, 411 00:20:23,472 --> 00:20:26,191 "The Battle of the Atlantic is over," 412 00:20:26,267 --> 00:20:28,235 because he sees how expert 413 00:20:28,310 --> 00:20:30,062 the British and Americans have become 414 00:20:30,146 --> 00:20:31,614 at detecting U-boats, 415 00:20:31,689 --> 00:20:35,284 chasing them down, and killing them. 416 00:20:35,359 --> 00:20:36,861 - NARRATOR: With ONS 5, 417 00:20:36,944 --> 00:20:39,788 the Battle of the Atlantic is all but won. 418 00:20:43,909 --> 00:20:45,911 And the astonishing transformation 419 00:20:45,995 --> 00:20:47,417 of American industry 420 00:20:47,496 --> 00:20:50,249 can start to dictate the fortunes of war. 421 00:20:54,003 --> 00:20:57,678 With the money and the might to out-produce the Axis, 422 00:20:57,757 --> 00:20:59,304 America embarks 423 00:20:59,383 --> 00:21:02,853 on an unprecedented industrial and social revolution. 424 00:21:02,928 --> 00:21:04,851 - MAN 4: You had a war industrial board. 425 00:21:04,930 --> 00:21:06,603 They looked around the United States and said, 426 00:21:06,682 --> 00:21:08,025 "This particular place is gonna be 427 00:21:08,100 --> 00:21:10,102 where we're gonna build tanks-- we're gonna build planes here." 428 00:21:10,186 --> 00:21:11,466 And so the population went there. 429 00:21:11,520 --> 00:21:14,069 - It's as if in World War ll, somebody had picked up 430 00:21:14,148 --> 00:21:16,992 the North American continent at the Eastern seaboard 431 00:21:17,067 --> 00:21:18,660 and raised it and tipped it, 432 00:21:18,736 --> 00:21:21,080 and everything--people, money, machines-- 433 00:21:21,155 --> 00:21:24,830 everything just slid westward across the continent. 434 00:21:24,909 --> 00:21:28,664 - NARRATOR: The population of California swells by 53%, 435 00:21:28,746 --> 00:21:30,874 Oregon by 40%, 436 00:21:30,956 --> 00:21:33,254 and Washington by 37%. 437 00:21:33,334 --> 00:21:34,586 Nineteen million women 438 00:21:34,668 --> 00:21:37,091 become the core of the American labor force, 439 00:21:37,171 --> 00:21:39,469 working in war factories, 440 00:21:39,548 --> 00:21:43,849 transportation, and agriculture across the nation. 441 00:21:43,928 --> 00:21:46,101 Manufacturers of all sizes 442 00:21:46,180 --> 00:21:49,650 become a critical part of the war effort. 443 00:21:49,725 --> 00:21:51,602 - COL. FARRELL: Typewriter manufacturers, 444 00:21:51,685 --> 00:21:54,985 canned goods manufacturers-- they're all converted. 445 00:21:55,064 --> 00:21:59,035 They're all mobilized, if you will, to support the war effort. 446 00:21:59,109 --> 00:22:01,157 - DR. CRANE: Car factories are turned into making bombers 447 00:22:01,237 --> 00:22:04,161 and refrigerator factories are turned into making armored cars. 448 00:22:04,240 --> 00:22:06,441 - Not for nothing, it's called "the production miracle." 449 00:22:09,912 --> 00:22:11,392 - NARRATOR: American industry produces 450 00:22:11,455 --> 00:22:15,801 87,000 ships and landing craft, 451 00:22:15,876 --> 00:22:18,971 100,000 tanks and armored vehicles, 452 00:22:19,046 --> 00:22:21,720 300,000 aircraft, 453 00:22:21,799 --> 00:22:24,222 2 million trucks, 454 00:22:24,301 --> 00:22:27,145 20 million rifles and small arms, 455 00:22:27,221 --> 00:22:30,225 and 41 billion rounds of ammunition-- 456 00:22:30,307 --> 00:22:32,355 enough to kill the population of the world 457 00:22:32,434 --> 00:22:35,358 17 times over. 458 00:22:35,437 --> 00:22:39,032 Yet America's decision to engage Germany first 459 00:22:39,108 --> 00:22:41,486 comes at a price. 460 00:22:43,612 --> 00:22:45,535 - DR. CRANE: The Japanese centrifugal offensive 461 00:22:45,614 --> 00:22:49,164 was a shock to everybody. 462 00:22:49,243 --> 00:22:52,213 They seemed unstoppable. 463 00:22:52,288 --> 00:22:55,542 - NARRATOR: Japan advances through the Pacific unchecked, 464 00:22:55,624 --> 00:22:59,094 capturing American, British and Dutch territories 465 00:22:59,169 --> 00:23:01,718 in a string of decisive victories. 466 00:23:04,592 --> 00:23:06,014 Within six months, 467 00:23:06,093 --> 00:23:08,141 they have near complete control 468 00:23:08,220 --> 00:23:10,268 of the Pacific theatre. 469 00:23:10,347 --> 00:23:12,566 - They captured territories for two main reasons. 470 00:23:12,641 --> 00:23:14,689 The first one was for resources. 471 00:23:14,768 --> 00:23:17,066 The Dutch East indies provide oil and rubber, 472 00:23:17,146 --> 00:23:20,070 which they're going to need to keep their war machine going. 473 00:23:20,149 --> 00:23:22,527 They also knew America would eventually respond, 474 00:23:22,610 --> 00:23:24,487 and so a lot of the territories 475 00:23:24,570 --> 00:23:27,790 were going to be barriers to set up against the Americans 476 00:23:27,865 --> 00:23:29,538 when they came back across. 477 00:23:29,617 --> 00:23:33,292 - NARRATOR: April 1942... America strikes back. 478 00:23:36,248 --> 00:23:37,841 Launching from the US Hornet, 479 00:23:37,917 --> 00:23:41,512 16 B-25's kick-start the next phase of war... 480 00:23:42,421 --> 00:23:46,517 by bombing Tokyo. 481 00:23:46,592 --> 00:23:48,560 - DR. CRANE: For the Americans, the raid 482 00:23:48,636 --> 00:23:50,263 is a chance to strike back, 483 00:23:50,346 --> 00:23:53,190 even though it didn't do very much material damage. 484 00:23:53,265 --> 00:23:55,814 But it had a major impact on Japanese leadership. 485 00:23:55,893 --> 00:23:58,146 The military was embarrassed they'd allowed their-- 486 00:23:58,228 --> 00:24:01,323 the emperor to be threatened like that. 487 00:24:01,398 --> 00:24:03,867 - NARRATOR: The Japanese respond, setting their sights 488 00:24:03,943 --> 00:24:08,244 on America's most westerly Pacific base. 489 00:24:08,322 --> 00:24:11,326 From space, their strategy is clear-- 490 00:24:11,408 --> 00:24:13,456 seizing the island of Midway 491 00:24:13,535 --> 00:24:15,833 will extend their defensive perimeter 492 00:24:15,913 --> 00:24:18,086 deep into American waters. 493 00:24:18,165 --> 00:24:21,886 - And their plan is, "We are going to surprise the Americans. 494 00:24:21,961 --> 00:24:25,181 "We're gonna seize Midway, and they are going to be forced 495 00:24:25,255 --> 00:24:27,758 to come out and fight us on our terms." 496 00:24:27,841 --> 00:24:29,514 The problem for the Japanese is 497 00:24:29,593 --> 00:24:32,187 the Americans already know they're coming. 498 00:24:35,140 --> 00:24:37,484 The story of the American code breakers 499 00:24:37,559 --> 00:24:39,812 is one of these lesser-known 500 00:24:39,895 --> 00:24:42,148 but perhaps one of the most important parts of the story 501 00:24:42,231 --> 00:24:45,075 of why America wins in the Pacific. 502 00:24:45,150 --> 00:24:47,369 - NARRATOR: From June 1939, 503 00:24:47,444 --> 00:24:50,118 the US Navy Combat intelligence Unit 504 00:24:50,197 --> 00:24:52,575 under the command of Joseph Rochefort 505 00:24:52,658 --> 00:24:55,878 has been attempting to decipher JN-25, 506 00:24:55,953 --> 00:24:58,251 the Japanese naval code. 507 00:25:00,582 --> 00:25:04,052 Using punch card technology and mathematical analysis, 508 00:25:04,128 --> 00:25:07,257 they work around the clock. 509 00:25:07,339 --> 00:25:09,057 In the lead-up to Midway, 510 00:25:09,133 --> 00:25:11,727 the decisive breakthrough is made. 511 00:25:11,802 --> 00:25:13,224 - PETER: They break the code. 512 00:25:13,303 --> 00:25:15,397 They knew the Japanese were coming. 513 00:25:15,472 --> 00:25:17,725 They knew where they were coming to Midway. 514 00:25:17,808 --> 00:25:20,357 They even knew when they were coming. 515 00:25:22,730 --> 00:25:25,233 - NARRATOR: US intelligence finally grasps 516 00:25:25,315 --> 00:25:27,568 the full scale of the Japanese attack. 517 00:25:31,238 --> 00:25:33,741 The situation is highly precarious. 518 00:25:37,411 --> 00:25:38,788 With a weakened fleet 519 00:25:38,871 --> 00:25:41,545 and up against a battle-hardened enemy force, 520 00:25:41,623 --> 00:25:44,126 Midway is the moment of truth. 521 00:25:44,209 --> 00:25:46,303 - PROF. OVERY: The only way the Midway battle 522 00:25:46,378 --> 00:25:47,504 would work for America 523 00:25:47,588 --> 00:25:49,431 was to have their carriers in the right place 524 00:25:49,506 --> 00:25:51,099 and be able to strike the Japanese 525 00:25:51,175 --> 00:25:52,427 at just the right time. 526 00:25:52,509 --> 00:25:55,683 - The Americans have gotta get in the first major shot. 527 00:25:59,433 --> 00:26:00,730 - NARRATOR: At 4:00 a.m., 528 00:26:00,809 --> 00:26:04,279 Japanese bombing of Midway begins. 529 00:26:04,354 --> 00:26:08,325 What Admiral Nagumo can't see is 275 miles away, 530 00:26:08,400 --> 00:26:11,153 safely outside the range of Japanese radar, 531 00:26:11,236 --> 00:26:13,409 4 US carriers 532 00:26:13,489 --> 00:26:15,833 are poised for a counterattack. 533 00:26:15,908 --> 00:26:17,706 Only at 7:40 a.m. 534 00:26:17,785 --> 00:26:19,537 Does a Japanese reconnaissance plane 535 00:26:19,620 --> 00:26:24,342 spot the US fleet. 536 00:26:24,416 --> 00:26:27,761 - DR. CRANE: Battles are often decided by minutes and seconds, 537 00:26:27,836 --> 00:26:31,966 and Midway is filled with important minutes and seconds. 538 00:26:32,049 --> 00:26:34,268 When the late spotter plane 539 00:26:34,343 --> 00:26:35,970 finally finds the American fleet, 540 00:26:36,053 --> 00:26:37,976 Admiral Nagumo is hit with this dilemma about, 541 00:26:38,055 --> 00:26:41,150 "Do I outfit my aircraft for bombs to bomb Midway, 542 00:26:41,225 --> 00:26:43,398 "as they already are, or do I stop, 543 00:26:43,477 --> 00:26:45,400 "take those bombs off and put on torpedoes 544 00:26:45,479 --> 00:26:47,106 so they can go after the American fleet?" 545 00:26:47,189 --> 00:26:48,736 And whatever decision he comes upon 546 00:26:48,816 --> 00:26:51,285 is gonna have a major impact on the rest of the battle. 547 00:26:51,360 --> 00:26:53,829 - PROF. OVERY: While they were doing all of this, of course, 548 00:26:53,904 --> 00:26:55,702 there was a long, critical waiting point, 549 00:26:55,781 --> 00:26:56,998 with aircraft on the decks, 550 00:26:57,074 --> 00:26:59,293 huge quantities of explosives around. 551 00:26:59,368 --> 00:27:03,214 For the Japanese this was the riskiest moment. 552 00:27:03,288 --> 00:27:07,418 - NARRATOR: it is the moment America has been waiting for-- 553 00:27:07,501 --> 00:27:12,098 41 Douglas torpedo bombers descend for the attack. 554 00:27:13,590 --> 00:27:15,763 - DR. CRANE: But the American torpedo bombers show up 555 00:27:15,843 --> 00:27:19,518 unescorted, completely vulnerable. 556 00:27:19,596 --> 00:27:21,940 They're shot down like fish in a barrel. 557 00:27:22,015 --> 00:27:25,189 They just don't survive. 558 00:27:25,269 --> 00:27:28,990 - NARRATOR: Thirty-five out of 41 planes are lost. 559 00:27:29,064 --> 00:27:32,159 Not a single bomb hits the Japanese fleet. 560 00:27:36,029 --> 00:27:40,034 It seems that Japan has struck the decisive blow. 561 00:27:42,995 --> 00:27:45,544 - And then all of a sudden, the dive bombers come in, 562 00:27:45,622 --> 00:27:47,920 and the whole world changes. 563 00:27:51,003 --> 00:27:52,300 - NARRATOR: A second wave 564 00:27:52,379 --> 00:27:56,384 of American dive-bombers descends. 565 00:27:56,466 --> 00:27:58,309 - DR. CRANE: There's the Japanese fleet 566 00:27:58,385 --> 00:28:00,137 with no air cover and the decks covered 567 00:28:00,220 --> 00:28:02,689 with airplanes and torpedoes and bombs. 568 00:28:02,764 --> 00:28:04,732 They're just torches to be lit, 569 00:28:04,808 --> 00:28:06,401 and the dive-bombers will come in, 570 00:28:06,476 --> 00:28:08,069 and three Japanese aircraft carriers 571 00:28:08,145 --> 00:28:10,068 are destroyed in minutes. 572 00:28:12,774 --> 00:28:15,493 - NARRATOR: As the final Japanese carrier is destroyed, 573 00:28:15,569 --> 00:28:21,326 along with 250 elite Japanese pilots, 574 00:28:21,408 --> 00:28:24,127 the balance of power 575 00:28:24,203 --> 00:28:26,376 has dramatically swung in America's favor. 576 00:28:26,455 --> 00:28:28,628 - PROF. WAWRO: We had seven new carriers under construction. 577 00:28:28,707 --> 00:28:30,550 They had one carrier under construction. 578 00:28:30,626 --> 00:28:33,220 So they were never gonna be able to replace these carriers. 579 00:28:33,295 --> 00:28:35,218 And what it meant was they would be 580 00:28:35,297 --> 00:28:38,221 thrown back on the defensive for the duration of the war. 581 00:28:40,385 --> 00:28:42,387 - NARRATOR: In a global theatre of war, 582 00:28:42,471 --> 00:28:44,690 control of the air is proving to be 583 00:28:44,765 --> 00:28:49,396 one of the determining factors for victory. 584 00:28:49,478 --> 00:28:51,355 On the other side of the planet, 585 00:28:51,438 --> 00:28:53,861 America's first strikes on Nazi Germany 586 00:28:53,941 --> 00:28:56,945 are coming from the sky. 587 00:28:57,027 --> 00:28:58,870 The major cities in Europe 588 00:28:58,946 --> 00:29:01,199 are the new front lines of war. 589 00:29:01,281 --> 00:29:02,578 - [bombs whistle] 590 00:29:06,078 --> 00:29:08,581 - NARRATOR: Six months on from Pearl Harbor 591 00:29:08,664 --> 00:29:10,666 and the battlefronts of World War ll 592 00:29:10,749 --> 00:29:13,343 are at a tipping point. 593 00:29:13,418 --> 00:29:15,546 America and her allies have stalled 594 00:29:15,629 --> 00:29:17,222 the momentum of German aggression 595 00:29:17,297 --> 00:29:20,096 in the Battle of the Atlantic 596 00:29:20,175 --> 00:29:22,644 and halted Japanese territorial expansion 597 00:29:22,719 --> 00:29:26,895 in the decisive victory at Midway. 598 00:29:26,974 --> 00:29:29,068 And in June 1942, 599 00:29:29,142 --> 00:29:32,237 the first American bombers arrive in Great Britain. 600 00:29:32,312 --> 00:29:37,318 - [suspenseful orchestral music] 601 00:29:37,401 --> 00:29:40,405 - NARRATOR: They join a brutal battle for air supremacy 602 00:29:40,487 --> 00:29:44,287 that has raged over Europe since the outbreak of war. 603 00:29:48,537 --> 00:29:51,757 Germany's Luftwaffe squadrons draw first blood, 604 00:29:51,832 --> 00:29:52,754 bringing Poland, 605 00:29:52,833 --> 00:29:54,551 then the Low Countries and France 606 00:29:54,626 --> 00:29:56,424 to their knees. 607 00:29:56,503 --> 00:29:58,756 - DR. CRANE: The fall of France in 1940 608 00:29:58,839 --> 00:30:00,136 really seemed to vindicate 609 00:30:00,215 --> 00:30:01,888 the superiority of the Blitzkrieg. 610 00:30:01,967 --> 00:30:05,062 There's big concerns that the Germans may be unstoppable. 611 00:30:05,137 --> 00:30:07,765 - NARRATOR: With Nazi domination almost complete, 612 00:30:07,848 --> 00:30:09,475 Hitler turns the Luftwaffe 613 00:30:09,558 --> 00:30:11,936 against his last remaining opposition... 614 00:30:12,019 --> 00:30:13,612 Great Britain. 615 00:30:13,687 --> 00:30:16,816 It is imperative that its Royal Air Force holds. 616 00:30:16,898 --> 00:30:19,526 - The stakes in the Battle of Britain, for the British, 617 00:30:19,609 --> 00:30:21,703 are survival. 618 00:30:21,778 --> 00:30:23,872 - NARRATOR: July 10, 1940... 619 00:30:23,947 --> 00:30:26,041 the Battle of Britain begins. 620 00:30:26,116 --> 00:30:29,791 The Luftwaffe pounds British defenses and its major cities. 621 00:30:29,870 --> 00:30:31,668 - [machine gun firing] 622 00:30:38,295 --> 00:30:40,798 - The RAF adapts very quickly 623 00:30:40,881 --> 00:30:44,260 and begins to shoot down more German bombers and fighters 624 00:30:44,343 --> 00:30:47,142 than the Germans can replace. 625 00:30:47,220 --> 00:30:49,348 - NARRATOR: Nineteen-hundred German aircraft 626 00:30:49,431 --> 00:30:52,651 are destroyed in 113 days. 627 00:30:52,726 --> 00:30:55,900 It is an unsustainable rate of attrition. 628 00:30:55,979 --> 00:30:59,108 - So Hitler's forced to cancel the battle of Britain and begin 629 00:30:59,191 --> 00:31:02,240 massing forces for an invasion of the Soviet Union. 630 00:31:05,447 --> 00:31:06,619 - NARRATOR: The Battle of Britain 631 00:31:06,698 --> 00:31:11,295 is Hitler's first major defeat of World War ll. 632 00:31:11,370 --> 00:31:15,250 Air power is the new orthodoxy of modern warfare. 633 00:31:15,332 --> 00:31:19,633 Roosevelt orders vast squadrons of aircraft to be manufactured. 634 00:31:21,797 --> 00:31:24,095 At Ford's Willow Run plant in Michigan, 635 00:31:24,174 --> 00:31:27,644 an astounding 8,500 bombers are produced. 636 00:31:29,471 --> 00:31:32,941 Over 127,000 bombers are made... 637 00:31:33,016 --> 00:31:37,021 13,600 are transported to British airfields. 638 00:31:41,066 --> 00:31:42,488 The assault on Germany 639 00:31:42,567 --> 00:31:46,322 can now enter a new phase of intensity. 640 00:31:46,405 --> 00:31:48,828 - DR. CRANE: The arrival of the 8th Air Force in Britain 641 00:31:48,907 --> 00:31:50,454 had a number of impacts-- number one, 642 00:31:50,534 --> 00:31:52,787 it guaranteed that the Germans wouldn't be able to launch 643 00:31:52,869 --> 00:31:54,949 another major attack against Britain the way they had 644 00:31:54,996 --> 00:31:56,088 in the Battle of Britain. 645 00:31:56,164 --> 00:31:58,005 There was just too many Allied airplanes there. 646 00:31:58,041 --> 00:32:00,089 It also was a boost to British morale 647 00:32:00,168 --> 00:32:02,921 that the Americans were finally coming en masse. 648 00:32:03,004 --> 00:32:04,884 - NARRATOR: But the American airmen are entering 649 00:32:04,923 --> 00:32:07,301 a new kind of warfare-- 650 00:32:07,384 --> 00:32:12,140 where sheer weight of numbers is no guarantee of success. 651 00:32:12,222 --> 00:32:15,146 - CHRIS: The amount of weapons that are being thrown up 652 00:32:15,225 --> 00:32:17,648 to stop the bombers is having an enormous toll. 653 00:32:17,727 --> 00:32:20,651 The survivability rate is going 11 to 1 to the infantry. 654 00:32:20,730 --> 00:32:22,573 It's actually safer to be an infantryman 655 00:32:22,649 --> 00:32:24,777 on the ground in Europe in a foxhole 656 00:32:24,860 --> 00:32:26,828 than it is to be in this, uh, 657 00:32:26,903 --> 00:32:30,407 advanced machine flying high above. 658 00:32:30,490 --> 00:32:33,710 - NARRATOR: After losing 1,135 bombers, 659 00:32:33,785 --> 00:32:37,085 the RAF switches to nighttime raids. 660 00:32:37,164 --> 00:32:38,541 But in the dark, 661 00:32:38,623 --> 00:32:41,092 only 1 .5% of all bombs 662 00:32:41,168 --> 00:32:45,093 fall within 3 miles of the target. 663 00:32:45,172 --> 00:32:46,970 - The Americans decide that it's too inefficient, 664 00:32:47,048 --> 00:32:48,846 that you had to do it in daylight 665 00:32:48,925 --> 00:32:50,222 where you could see the target. 666 00:32:50,302 --> 00:32:52,100 They thought, "We've got more heavily defended bombers. 667 00:32:52,179 --> 00:32:53,931 "We think this will work." 668 00:32:54,014 --> 00:32:57,314 - NARRATOR: American confidence is based on the B-17, 669 00:32:57,392 --> 00:33:01,067 the most sophisticated war machine of its time. 670 00:33:01,146 --> 00:33:03,524 - CHRIS: The B-17 is an amazing aircraft. 671 00:33:03,607 --> 00:33:05,530 They call it the flying fortress--well, why? 672 00:33:05,609 --> 00:33:08,328 It has 13 50-caliber machine guns 673 00:33:08,403 --> 00:33:11,202 arrayed all around it to give it a bubble of fire. 674 00:33:11,281 --> 00:33:13,124 You have fire coming out the front, 675 00:33:13,200 --> 00:33:14,747 you have fire coming out the flanks, 676 00:33:14,826 --> 00:33:16,794 below, above, and in the rear. 677 00:33:16,870 --> 00:33:18,872 - COL. FARRELL: it was believed that it could fly 678 00:33:18,955 --> 00:33:22,380 in broad daylight, unescorted by fighter aircraft, 679 00:33:22,459 --> 00:33:25,087 deep into the heart of enemy territory 680 00:33:25,170 --> 00:33:28,174 and unleash an amazing amount of ordnance 681 00:33:28,256 --> 00:33:30,600 on enemy targets. 682 00:33:30,675 --> 00:33:33,428 - NARRATOR: With unswerving faith in the B-17, 683 00:33:33,512 --> 00:33:36,436 the American 8th Air Force plan a dual raid 684 00:33:36,515 --> 00:33:39,735 to destroy the heart of German aviation production. 685 00:33:42,646 --> 00:33:44,740 - DR. CRANE: The Schweinfurt- Regensburg Mission 686 00:33:44,814 --> 00:33:46,691 was seen as the way to really prove 687 00:33:46,775 --> 00:33:49,449 that this precision bombing idea would work. 688 00:33:49,528 --> 00:33:50,780 They seemed to have picked out 689 00:33:50,862 --> 00:33:52,409 the key industries they could knock out 690 00:33:52,489 --> 00:33:54,617 that would cripple the German economy. 691 00:33:54,699 --> 00:33:56,451 They had the battle plan, they thought, 692 00:33:56,535 --> 00:33:58,788 that would get them to the target. 693 00:33:58,870 --> 00:34:01,123 - NARRATOR: Two squadrons of B-17's 694 00:34:01,206 --> 00:34:04,551 commanded by Colonel LeMay and Brigadier General Williams 695 00:34:04,626 --> 00:34:07,175 prepare to attack simultaneously, 696 00:34:07,254 --> 00:34:09,848 splitting German defenses. 697 00:34:09,923 --> 00:34:14,178 Almost immediately, the plan begins to unravel. 698 00:34:14,261 --> 00:34:18,107 - It was a foggy day in England. LeMay got his guys up. 699 00:34:18,181 --> 00:34:20,149 The other bomber division couldn't get up. 700 00:34:20,225 --> 00:34:22,569 The decision was made that they couldn't land LeMay's guys. 701 00:34:22,644 --> 00:34:24,066 They sent them on. 702 00:34:27,816 --> 00:34:29,739 When the Regensburg mission goes in on its own, 703 00:34:29,818 --> 00:34:32,446 the bombers were sitting ducks, not only for flak, 704 00:34:32,529 --> 00:34:34,531 but for the Germans that were gathering 705 00:34:34,614 --> 00:34:36,616 from all over the whole defense zone. 706 00:34:44,958 --> 00:34:46,835 The Schweinfurt leg then comes in 707 00:34:46,918 --> 00:34:49,341 enough time after the Regensburg leg 708 00:34:49,421 --> 00:34:52,015 so the Germans can refit and rearm, 709 00:34:52,090 --> 00:34:54,138 and it goes through the same mauling. 710 00:35:01,558 --> 00:35:04,732 - NARRATOR: Sixty US bombers are destroyed, 711 00:35:04,811 --> 00:35:08,816 double the losses ever suffered in a single raid. 712 00:35:08,898 --> 00:35:11,401 - PETER: The problem for the Allies was we took 713 00:35:11,484 --> 00:35:15,534 the marketing of the flying fortress seriously. 714 00:35:15,614 --> 00:35:17,708 We took the idea that it could protect itself 715 00:35:17,782 --> 00:35:19,329 with its own machine guns 716 00:35:19,409 --> 00:35:22,253 and not have to worry about escorted seriously, 717 00:35:22,329 --> 00:35:24,047 And that didn't work. 718 00:35:24,122 --> 00:35:27,376 - NARRATOR: The flaw is startlingly clear from above-- 719 00:35:27,459 --> 00:35:30,258 the lack of fighter escort protection. 720 00:35:30,337 --> 00:35:32,556 The fighters have limited range 721 00:35:32,631 --> 00:35:35,680 and can only protect the bombers partway to their targets, 722 00:35:35,759 --> 00:35:38,057 leaving them dangerously exposed. 723 00:35:38,136 --> 00:35:40,230 - Then we get the real game changer. 724 00:35:40,305 --> 00:35:43,809 We get the P-51. 725 00:35:43,892 --> 00:35:46,896 The P-51 was an amazing fighter 726 00:35:46,978 --> 00:35:49,527 on so many different levels, 727 00:35:49,606 --> 00:35:53,531 but the real key is it had amazing range. 728 00:35:53,610 --> 00:35:55,612 It went with the American bombers 729 00:35:55,695 --> 00:35:58,824 all the way in, all the way out. 730 00:35:58,907 --> 00:36:02,662 That meant that we could now take down the German defenses. 731 00:36:02,744 --> 00:36:05,372 We could create true air dominance, 732 00:36:05,455 --> 00:36:07,958 and that's when you see the Luftwaffe 733 00:36:08,041 --> 00:36:11,921 essentially swept from the skies. 734 00:36:12,003 --> 00:36:13,550 - DR. CRANE: Once the Luftwaffe's destroyed, 735 00:36:13,630 --> 00:36:16,304 and we have pretty much free rein over the German skies, 736 00:36:16,383 --> 00:36:20,229 we really start to take down the oil industry. 737 00:36:20,303 --> 00:36:23,147 - NARRATOR: Oil... the single most essential commodity 738 00:36:23,223 --> 00:36:25,897 of World War ll. 739 00:36:25,975 --> 00:36:28,194 - COL. FARRELL: Possession of large supplies of oil 740 00:36:28,269 --> 00:36:30,317 was the only way to victory. 741 00:36:30,397 --> 00:36:34,777 Without oil, mechanized armies could not fight. 742 00:36:34,859 --> 00:36:36,202 - NARRATOR: From space, 743 00:36:36,277 --> 00:36:40,623 the battle for the world's oil reserves is revealed. 744 00:36:40,699 --> 00:36:42,622 America is self-sufficient. 745 00:36:42,701 --> 00:36:44,544 Its oil fields are the cornerstone 746 00:36:44,619 --> 00:36:47,213 of Allied military strength. 747 00:36:50,458 --> 00:36:52,005 In contrast, 748 00:36:52,085 --> 00:36:54,964 Germany's stockpile of 20 million barrels 749 00:36:55,046 --> 00:36:56,423 is rapidly running out. 750 00:36:56,506 --> 00:36:57,974 - PROF. OVERY: One of the weaknesses 751 00:36:58,049 --> 00:36:59,847 in the German war effort 752 00:36:59,926 --> 00:37:02,600 was they couldn't get access to unlimited quantities of oil. 753 00:37:02,679 --> 00:37:05,307 They then decided to use synthetic oil, 754 00:37:05,390 --> 00:37:07,142 and synthetic oil was really critical 755 00:37:07,225 --> 00:37:09,728 for making up that difference. 756 00:37:09,811 --> 00:37:11,063 - NARRATOR: Synthetic oil, 757 00:37:11,146 --> 00:37:13,023 produced from coal and natural gas, 758 00:37:13,106 --> 00:37:15,950 is the lifeblood of Hitler's mechanized forces. 759 00:37:19,154 --> 00:37:20,497 As Allied air raids 760 00:37:20,572 --> 00:37:22,825 cripple Germany's synthetic fuel production, 761 00:37:22,907 --> 00:37:26,787 Hitler's best hope is to seize the Caucasus oil fields. 762 00:37:29,622 --> 00:37:32,501 Deep inside Russia, the two sides clash 763 00:37:32,584 --> 00:37:35,929 in the bloodiest fighting history has ever seen. 764 00:37:36,004 --> 00:37:40,305 At stake is the outcome of World War ll. 765 00:37:48,224 --> 00:37:50,647 September 1940... 766 00:37:50,727 --> 00:37:52,775 while America remains neutral, 767 00:37:52,854 --> 00:37:56,233 Hitler has Mainland Europe in his grip. 768 00:37:56,316 --> 00:37:58,569 But in the skies over Britain, 769 00:37:58,651 --> 00:38:01,905 the Nazis' relentless westward advance is halted. 770 00:38:03,448 --> 00:38:05,325 It is a defeat that forces Hitler 771 00:38:05,408 --> 00:38:08,287 to turn to his attention towards his ultimate goal-- 772 00:38:08,369 --> 00:38:12,044 the conquest and annihilation of the Soviet Union. 773 00:38:14,584 --> 00:38:16,507 - COL. FARRELL: The Soviet Union represented 774 00:38:16,586 --> 00:38:19,886 the nexus of everything that Hitler hated. 775 00:38:19,964 --> 00:38:24,765 He saw it as a bastion of communism and Judaism. 776 00:38:24,844 --> 00:38:26,767 And if it were not defeated, 777 00:38:26,846 --> 00:38:28,848 ultimately the Soviet Union 778 00:38:28,932 --> 00:38:32,482 would destroy Germany and destroy the Aryan race. 779 00:38:32,560 --> 00:38:35,313 - There was also just sheer pragmatism here. 780 00:38:35,396 --> 00:38:38,366 The Soviet Union was the "gross raum wirtschaft," 781 00:38:38,441 --> 00:38:40,739 the great economic space. 782 00:38:40,819 --> 00:38:42,787 They needed the raw materials, 783 00:38:42,862 --> 00:38:44,864 the oil, the food, 784 00:38:44,948 --> 00:38:47,076 and by annexing the Soviet Union, 785 00:38:47,158 --> 00:38:49,661 they'd be able to sustain a long war 786 00:38:49,744 --> 00:38:53,374 and fend off any British- American attacks. 787 00:38:53,456 --> 00:38:57,336 - NARRATOR: June 22, 1941... 788 00:38:57,418 --> 00:39:00,171 Hitler launches "Operation Barbarossa," 789 00:39:00,255 --> 00:39:02,383 the invasion of the Soviet Union. 790 00:39:05,635 --> 00:39:08,058 Across a 1,800-mile front, 791 00:39:08,137 --> 00:39:11,232 Hitler's army of over 4 million Wehrmacht troops 792 00:39:11,307 --> 00:39:12,900 surges forward, 793 00:39:12,976 --> 00:39:15,479 destroying everything in its path. 794 00:39:15,562 --> 00:39:17,485 - COL. FARRELL: This was the largest army 795 00:39:17,564 --> 00:39:20,659 that had been assembled in the history of world. 796 00:39:20,733 --> 00:39:22,576 And the Germans demonstrated 797 00:39:22,652 --> 00:39:24,746 an operational and tactical mastery 798 00:39:24,821 --> 00:39:26,994 that the Soviets simply could not match. 799 00:39:29,409 --> 00:39:33,710 The barbarity is almost incomprehensible. 800 00:39:33,788 --> 00:39:36,416 Following the front-line troops, 801 00:39:36,499 --> 00:39:38,922 there were the special action squads. 802 00:39:39,002 --> 00:39:43,508 Their purpose was to identify and murder 803 00:39:43,590 --> 00:39:45,217 political leaders 804 00:39:45,300 --> 00:39:49,680 and ultimately Jews in the occupied areas. 805 00:39:49,762 --> 00:39:51,730 - NARRATOR: The slaughter of a million Soviets 806 00:39:51,806 --> 00:39:54,855 is the merciless testing ground for the Holocaust. 807 00:39:59,063 --> 00:40:02,067 The SS accelerate the genocide of Jews 808 00:40:02,150 --> 00:40:05,996 and others seen as undesirable. 809 00:40:06,070 --> 00:40:09,040 Over 9 million are slaughtered. 810 00:40:13,661 --> 00:40:17,837 - COL. FARRELL: This was industrialized mass murder. 811 00:40:17,916 --> 00:40:19,259 This was something that-- 812 00:40:19,334 --> 00:40:22,258 that hadn't even appeared in the middle ages. 813 00:40:22,337 --> 00:40:24,465 - NARRATOR: By the winter of 1941, 814 00:40:24,547 --> 00:40:26,265 their brutal advance has brought them 815 00:40:26,341 --> 00:40:29,595 to the brink of victory. 816 00:40:29,677 --> 00:40:31,725 Leningrad is under siege, 817 00:40:31,804 --> 00:40:35,525 and German panzer divisions are at the gates of Moscow. 818 00:40:35,600 --> 00:40:38,979 Seeking a devastating tactical and ideological blow, 819 00:40:39,062 --> 00:40:43,363 Hitler turns his attentions towards Stalingrad. 820 00:40:43,441 --> 00:40:45,864 - PROF. WAWRO: Stalingrad was an important target for Hitler 821 00:40:45,944 --> 00:40:48,618 because he knew by taking it, he would insult Stalin. 822 00:40:48,696 --> 00:40:51,449 He also knew he would force Stalin to try to take it back, 823 00:40:51,532 --> 00:40:54,035 and he would be able to wear down the Red Army. 824 00:40:54,118 --> 00:40:56,621 But also it was an important city because it would permit him 825 00:40:56,704 --> 00:40:59,253 to pivot south into the Caucasus 826 00:40:59,332 --> 00:41:01,755 and take all these oil-producing regions 827 00:41:01,834 --> 00:41:05,429 and make Germany self-sufficient in petroleum. 828 00:41:05,505 --> 00:41:06,722 - NARRATOR: For both sides, 829 00:41:06,798 --> 00:41:10,302 the stakes for the Battle for Stalingrad are immense. 830 00:41:10,385 --> 00:41:12,638 - COL. FARRELL: For Hitler to fail at Stalingrad 831 00:41:12,720 --> 00:41:16,600 would be an enormous blow to the Nazi myth. 832 00:41:16,683 --> 00:41:20,404 It would be an enormous blow to the war itself. 833 00:41:20,478 --> 00:41:24,199 Similarly, Josef Stalin was unrelenting. 834 00:41:24,273 --> 00:41:25,900 He would not tolerate defeat. 835 00:41:25,984 --> 00:41:28,407 He would not tolerate pulling back. 836 00:41:28,486 --> 00:41:30,739 To surrender or to give ground 837 00:41:30,822 --> 00:41:33,951 would be met by the utmost sanction. 838 00:41:37,453 --> 00:41:40,457 - NARRATOR: The Luftwaffe drop 1,000 tons of bombs 839 00:41:40,540 --> 00:41:42,838 on Stalingrad 840 00:41:42,917 --> 00:41:47,172 before 2½ million troops clash. 841 00:41:49,340 --> 00:41:52,264 - COL. FARRELL: The ferocity of the Battle of Stalingrad 842 00:41:52,343 --> 00:41:54,266 was something straight out of hell. 843 00:41:54,345 --> 00:41:57,224 It was not uncommon for battles to be raging 844 00:41:57,306 --> 00:42:01,231 not over parts of the city or city blocks, 845 00:42:01,310 --> 00:42:03,859 but literally for different floors 846 00:42:03,938 --> 00:42:06,691 within one building. 847 00:42:06,774 --> 00:42:09,368 In some cases, Soviet reinforcements 848 00:42:09,444 --> 00:42:11,446 came forward without weapons, 849 00:42:11,529 --> 00:42:13,281 facing certain death. 850 00:42:13,364 --> 00:42:17,210 And yet again and again and again they came. 851 00:42:17,285 --> 00:42:18,878 - NARRATOR: As the battle rages, 852 00:42:18,953 --> 00:42:22,583 the Red Army launch "Operation Uranus." 853 00:42:22,665 --> 00:42:25,009 What Hitler's high command cannot see 854 00:42:25,084 --> 00:42:27,507 is revealed from space. 855 00:42:27,587 --> 00:42:29,885 Over 1 million Soviet soldiers 856 00:42:29,964 --> 00:42:32,308 outflank the German positions, 857 00:42:32,383 --> 00:42:35,307 before cutting through the enemy's rear. 858 00:42:35,386 --> 00:42:37,855 - Operation Uranus was a complete shock, 859 00:42:37,930 --> 00:42:42,026 and suddenly Stalingrad was encircled. 860 00:42:42,101 --> 00:42:43,523 - NARRATOR: Cut off from supply, 861 00:42:43,603 --> 00:42:45,105 the Germans are plunged 862 00:42:45,188 --> 00:42:48,943 into the harshest of Russian winters. 863 00:42:49,025 --> 00:42:52,825 In sub-human conditions, they begin to disintegrate. 864 00:42:55,448 --> 00:42:57,416 - PROF. OVERY: it was freezing cold. 865 00:42:57,492 --> 00:42:59,790 Food supplies began to decline. 866 00:42:59,869 --> 00:43:01,246 Guns jammed. 867 00:43:01,329 --> 00:43:02,501 It was a nightmare. 868 00:43:02,580 --> 00:43:04,878 It's difficult to convey in simple words 869 00:43:04,957 --> 00:43:07,585 what that experience was like. 870 00:43:07,668 --> 00:43:09,716 - NARRATOR: After five months under siege, 871 00:43:09,796 --> 00:43:12,766 Hitler's once-mighty 6th Army capitulates-- 872 00:43:12,840 --> 00:43:16,890 the first German field army to do so. 873 00:43:16,969 --> 00:43:19,347 Nearly 2 million have fallen, 874 00:43:19,430 --> 00:43:22,559 but for the Soviets, the tide is turning. 875 00:43:24,393 --> 00:43:26,145 - COL. FARRELL: The boost to Soviet morale 876 00:43:26,229 --> 00:43:28,948 can scarcely be overstated. 877 00:43:29,023 --> 00:43:32,072 German prisoners were marched through Moscow. 878 00:43:32,151 --> 00:43:34,870 And this proved that the Nazi soldiers 879 00:43:34,946 --> 00:43:36,698 were not supermen. 880 00:43:36,781 --> 00:43:39,876 Instead, they saw German soldiers who quit, 881 00:43:39,951 --> 00:43:42,045 who surrendered, who could not match 882 00:43:42,120 --> 00:43:44,999 the determination of the Soviet soldier. 883 00:43:45,081 --> 00:43:48,210 - NARRATOR: For Hitler, the defeat is devastating. 884 00:43:48,292 --> 00:43:51,011 Instinctively, he strikes back. 885 00:43:51,087 --> 00:43:52,930 - COL. FARRELL: Adolf Hitler attempted 886 00:43:53,005 --> 00:43:55,303 to regain the strategic initiative, 887 00:43:55,383 --> 00:43:58,728 to close a gap-- a bulge if you will-- 888 00:43:58,803 --> 00:44:01,022 centered around Kursk. 889 00:44:01,097 --> 00:44:04,067 - NARRATOR: Seen from above, Hitler's objective is clear-- 890 00:44:04,142 --> 00:44:06,611 eliminate the bulge, concentrate his forces, 891 00:44:06,686 --> 00:44:08,563 and regain the initiative. 892 00:44:08,646 --> 00:44:10,444 For the Allies, it is critical 893 00:44:10,523 --> 00:44:13,527 that its newest military partner holds. 894 00:44:13,609 --> 00:44:15,828 - DR. PORTER: The eastern front is vital to the Allies 895 00:44:15,903 --> 00:44:19,783 because it absorbs the bulk of Germany's fighting power. 896 00:44:19,866 --> 00:44:21,960 To put it very brutally, the Soviets 897 00:44:22,034 --> 00:44:24,537 did most of the fighting and most of the dying on land. 898 00:44:24,620 --> 00:44:27,590 - NARRATOR: President Roosevelt commits over $11 billion 899 00:44:27,665 --> 00:44:30,919 of lend lease supplies to Stalin. 900 00:44:31,002 --> 00:44:33,846 Yet traditional trade routes through Europe are blocked. 901 00:44:33,921 --> 00:44:36,344 Getting US aid into the Soviet Union 902 00:44:36,424 --> 00:44:38,722 is one of the greatest Allied logistical challenges 903 00:44:38,801 --> 00:44:40,803 of the war. 904 00:44:40,887 --> 00:44:43,015 - There were three routes that we could use. 905 00:44:43,097 --> 00:44:45,350 One was the North Atlantic route 906 00:44:45,433 --> 00:44:49,154 into the northern Arctic ports of Archangel and Murmansk-- 907 00:44:49,228 --> 00:44:53,153 stormy seas, iced in, hard to get to. 908 00:44:53,232 --> 00:44:56,486 And then there was one across to the Pacific to Vladivostok, 909 00:44:56,569 --> 00:44:58,867 but everything had to be unloaded in Siberia 910 00:44:58,946 --> 00:45:01,119 and then trucked into Russia 911 00:45:01,199 --> 00:45:03,167 on the Trans-Siberian Railway, 912 00:45:03,242 --> 00:45:06,212 which is slow and time-consuming. 913 00:45:06,287 --> 00:45:08,710 And then there was the one around the Cape of Good Hope, 914 00:45:08,789 --> 00:45:13,169 up into Iran and into Southern Russia that way. 915 00:45:13,252 --> 00:45:14,674 - NARRATOR: The Persian Gulf route 916 00:45:14,754 --> 00:45:16,802 is crucial to Russian success, 917 00:45:16,881 --> 00:45:20,431 but making it viable is a monumental task. 918 00:45:20,509 --> 00:45:23,683 - We had to build a supply chain from scratch. 919 00:45:23,763 --> 00:45:25,686 There was no infrastructure. 920 00:45:25,765 --> 00:45:29,065 The harbors are not there-- we have to construct those. 921 00:45:29,143 --> 00:45:31,020 - NARRATOR: Allied engineers build wharfs, 922 00:45:31,103 --> 00:45:33,151 jetties, and piers. 923 00:45:33,231 --> 00:45:36,986 Simultaneously, 450 miles of roads are constructed 924 00:45:37,068 --> 00:45:40,288 and 2000 miles of railway modernized. 925 00:45:40,363 --> 00:45:41,910 With all routes now open, 926 00:45:41,989 --> 00:45:45,289 the US pumps 16 million tons of lend lease 927 00:45:45,368 --> 00:45:46,711 into Russia. 928 00:45:46,786 --> 00:45:48,788 Included are gasoline, 929 00:45:48,871 --> 00:45:51,875 ammunition, 930 00:45:51,958 --> 00:45:55,838 an entire military telecommunication system, 931 00:45:55,920 --> 00:45:58,469 14 million pairs of boots, 932 00:45:58,547 --> 00:46:01,426 and enough food to offer every Soviet soldier 933 00:46:01,509 --> 00:46:06,481 one square meal a day for over a year. 934 00:46:06,555 --> 00:46:07,932 But most significant 935 00:46:08,015 --> 00:46:09,892 are the half million Studebaker trucks 936 00:46:09,976 --> 00:46:12,946 supplied by the factories of Detroit. 937 00:46:13,020 --> 00:46:15,239 - The Studebaker truck was a real game changer, 938 00:46:15,314 --> 00:46:17,567 because it gives the Soviet Army 939 00:46:17,650 --> 00:46:20,244 the ability to operate on a massive scale 940 00:46:20,319 --> 00:46:22,538 with far-flung logistics. 941 00:46:22,613 --> 00:46:24,365 The other thing that these trucks give them 942 00:46:24,448 --> 00:46:27,952 is an advantage literally within the battle itself. 943 00:46:28,035 --> 00:46:30,413 The Russians had a lot of artillery. 944 00:46:30,496 --> 00:46:33,340 You match that artillery with the truck, 945 00:46:33,416 --> 00:46:35,009 and suddenly they've got 946 00:46:35,084 --> 00:46:37,883 these flying anti-tank batteries literally zipping 947 00:46:37,962 --> 00:46:40,465 across different parts of the battlefield. 948 00:46:40,548 --> 00:46:43,643 - NARRATOR: To give the Soviets the tactical advantage at Kursk, 949 00:46:43,718 --> 00:46:47,439 the Allies supply one final thing-- 950 00:46:47,513 --> 00:46:51,313 intelligence of the German offensive plans. 951 00:46:51,392 --> 00:46:53,072 - PETER: The Soviets knew they were coming. 952 00:46:53,144 --> 00:46:55,317 And so they create defenses of a scale 953 00:46:55,396 --> 00:46:58,070 that really hadn't been seen before in the war. 954 00:46:58,149 --> 00:47:02,199 I mean people talk about the Maginot Line in France. 955 00:47:02,278 --> 00:47:06,784 This thing was the Maginot Line put on steroids. 956 00:47:08,284 --> 00:47:09,627 - NARRATOR: From space, 957 00:47:09,702 --> 00:47:11,704 the full enormity of the Soviet defenses 958 00:47:11,787 --> 00:47:13,460 becomes clear. 959 00:47:13,539 --> 00:47:15,712 Three defensive lines contain 960 00:47:15,791 --> 00:47:19,671 a vast interconnected web of thousands of anti-tank guns, 961 00:47:19,754 --> 00:47:21,848 pre-sighted artillery zones, 962 00:47:21,922 --> 00:47:25,176 and over 400,000 mines. 963 00:47:25,259 --> 00:47:28,388 It is the largest defense network ever constructed-- 964 00:47:28,471 --> 00:47:30,940 over 50 miles deep. 965 00:47:36,354 --> 00:47:38,903 July 5, 1943... 966 00:47:38,981 --> 00:47:43,111 over 2,000 tanks and 2 million troops engage. 967 00:47:50,910 --> 00:47:53,413 - COL. FARRELL: The level of intensity at the Battle of Kursk 968 00:47:53,496 --> 00:47:54,918 was extraordinary. 969 00:47:54,997 --> 00:47:57,250 Large numbers of tanks and soldiers 970 00:47:57,333 --> 00:47:59,961 were fighting to the most brutal degree 971 00:48:00,044 --> 00:48:03,264 at very close quarters. 972 00:48:03,339 --> 00:48:06,183 There was brutal hand-to-hand combat, 973 00:48:06,258 --> 00:48:07,680 flamethrowers, 974 00:48:07,760 --> 00:48:09,103 thousands of tanks, 975 00:48:09,178 --> 00:48:11,647 coupled with artillery raining down. 976 00:48:11,722 --> 00:48:13,690 All of this would have combined 977 00:48:13,766 --> 00:48:15,860 to create a scene that would have resembled 978 00:48:15,935 --> 00:48:18,654 hell on earth. 979 00:48:18,729 --> 00:48:20,276 - NARRATOR: After 11 days, 980 00:48:20,356 --> 00:48:22,279 the German offensive collapses, 981 00:48:22,358 --> 00:48:25,077 only a third of the way to their objective. 982 00:48:29,490 --> 00:48:32,118 Hitler's attempt to crush the Soviet Union 983 00:48:32,201 --> 00:48:33,953 has failed. 984 00:48:35,246 --> 00:48:36,418 - COL. FARRELL: Hitler's worst nightmare 985 00:48:36,497 --> 00:48:37,999 had come to pass. 986 00:48:38,082 --> 00:48:41,586 Germany would now be faced with a war on two fronts 987 00:48:41,669 --> 00:48:45,924 and a war of attrition. 988 00:48:46,006 --> 00:48:47,474 - NARRATOR: Stalin gains 989 00:48:47,550 --> 00:48:49,223 the initiative on the Eastern Front 990 00:48:49,301 --> 00:48:51,019 at a huge cost-- 991 00:48:51,095 --> 00:48:54,895 over 9 million Soviet casualties. 992 00:48:54,974 --> 00:48:56,476 In contrast, 993 00:48:56,559 --> 00:48:58,903 America has yet to put a single soldier 994 00:48:58,978 --> 00:49:01,197 on the battlefields of Europe. 995 00:49:01,272 --> 00:49:05,027 - Stalin was deeply frustrated with Allied dawdling 996 00:49:05,109 --> 00:49:06,736 about opening a second front. 997 00:49:06,819 --> 00:49:08,992 He assumed that it was a conspiracy, 998 00:49:09,071 --> 00:49:11,290 that Churchill and Roosevelt 999 00:49:11,365 --> 00:49:14,665 were going to fight to the last Russian. 1000 00:49:14,743 --> 00:49:16,863 Then the British and Americans would cross the Channel 1001 00:49:16,912 --> 00:49:19,165 and harvest all the spoils of war, 1002 00:49:19,248 --> 00:49:20,625 the Russians having won it 1003 00:49:20,708 --> 00:49:22,210 with their own blood and treasure. 1004 00:49:24,879 --> 00:49:27,302 - NARRATOR: Prior to a full-scale invasion of Europe, 1005 00:49:27,381 --> 00:49:29,884 Roosevelt elects to blood his troops 1006 00:49:29,967 --> 00:49:32,516 in North Africa. 1007 00:49:32,595 --> 00:49:34,563 - COL. FARRELL: The North African campaign 1008 00:49:34,638 --> 00:49:37,517 was a testing ground for the American army, 1009 00:49:37,600 --> 00:49:40,319 which had yet to face the German military 1010 00:49:40,394 --> 00:49:42,817 in a significant way. 1011 00:49:42,897 --> 00:49:44,899 - NARRATOR: Overconfident and inexperienced, 1012 00:49:44,982 --> 00:49:48,703 the US Military is about to receive a baptism of fire-- 1013 00:49:48,777 --> 00:49:50,199 - [bombs exploding] 1014 00:49:50,279 --> 00:49:52,657 - NARRATOR: --that will shake it to its core. 1015 00:49:52,740 --> 00:49:56,040 - The disaster at Kasserine Pass was a seminal event. 1016 00:50:05,169 --> 00:50:06,887 - NARRATOR: As the American Pacific drive 1017 00:50:06,962 --> 00:50:09,306 towards Japan accelerates, 1018 00:50:09,381 --> 00:50:11,349 and as Stalin in the East 1019 00:50:11,425 --> 00:50:13,598 and the Allied bombing campaign in the west 1020 00:50:13,677 --> 00:50:15,930 continue to weaken the Third Reich, 1021 00:50:16,013 --> 00:50:18,141 America prepares to test its troops 1022 00:50:18,224 --> 00:50:19,771 in North Africa. 1023 00:50:22,353 --> 00:50:24,196 They will join a desert campaign 1024 00:50:24,271 --> 00:50:26,569 that has been raging for over two years. 1025 00:50:29,777 --> 00:50:32,781 June 10, 1940... 1026 00:50:32,863 --> 00:50:34,911 Italy, under Benito Mussolini, 1027 00:50:34,990 --> 00:50:37,413 joins the Axis 1028 00:50:37,493 --> 00:50:39,996 and, with Germany, plans to force Britain 1029 00:50:40,079 --> 00:50:41,581 from North Africa. 1030 00:50:41,664 --> 00:50:44,292 - PROF. WAWRO: North Africa was a vital front 1031 00:50:44,375 --> 00:50:46,218 for the British in World War ll 1032 00:50:46,293 --> 00:50:49,388 because it was the vital hinge of the British Empire. 1033 00:50:49,463 --> 00:50:51,090 - NARRATOR: A German and Italian victory 1034 00:50:51,173 --> 00:50:53,551 will open up the untapped oil reserves 1035 00:50:53,634 --> 00:50:56,387 of the Middle East 1036 00:50:56,470 --> 00:50:58,438 and seize the Suez Canal 1037 00:50:58,514 --> 00:51:01,063 that connects Britain to its empire. 1038 00:51:01,141 --> 00:51:04,190 - LTG MASON: The Suez Canal you needed to protect at all costs. 1039 00:51:04,270 --> 00:51:05,863 The bottom line, if you are moving 1040 00:51:05,938 --> 00:51:08,282 large quantities of equipment, you gotta use the sea lanes. 1041 00:51:08,357 --> 00:51:10,451 And that's as true today as it was then. 1042 00:51:10,526 --> 00:51:12,073 - NARRATOR: September 1940... 1043 00:51:12,152 --> 00:51:16,953 the Axis invades. 1044 00:51:17,032 --> 00:51:19,581 For two years, they drive the British back. 1045 00:51:19,660 --> 00:51:21,458 But the advance is halted 1046 00:51:21,537 --> 00:51:23,335 as German Field Marshall Rommel 1047 00:51:23,414 --> 00:51:27,385 is defeated at El Alamein. 1048 00:51:27,459 --> 00:51:29,336 To capitalize on this victory, 1049 00:51:29,420 --> 00:51:32,173 Churchill lobbies Roosevelt for support. 1050 00:51:32,256 --> 00:51:35,886 But the majority of presidential advisors have their doubts. 1051 00:51:35,968 --> 00:51:37,436 - COL. FARRELL: initially 1052 00:51:37,511 --> 00:51:39,605 most American senior military personnel, 1053 00:51:39,680 --> 00:51:42,433 saw the campaign in North Africa 1054 00:51:42,516 --> 00:51:44,860 as a diversion from the main effort, 1055 00:51:44,935 --> 00:51:47,859 essentially a waste of time. 1056 00:51:47,938 --> 00:51:51,659 - NARRATOR: Decisively, Roosevelt overrides his council. 1057 00:51:51,734 --> 00:51:54,203 - DR. CRANE: FDR's decision to send American forces 1058 00:51:54,278 --> 00:51:55,746 to North Africa was probably 1059 00:51:55,821 --> 00:51:58,916 the most important strategic decision of World War ll. 1060 00:51:58,991 --> 00:52:01,414 - PROF. WAWRO: it really gave us a place where we could 1061 00:52:01,493 --> 00:52:03,621 land the US army, bring it into the battle 1062 00:52:03,704 --> 00:52:05,581 against secondary German units, 1063 00:52:05,664 --> 00:52:07,587 not the units we'd encounter in Europe. 1064 00:52:07,666 --> 00:52:11,170 And so it was-- it was a brilliant move. 1065 00:52:11,253 --> 00:52:13,301 - NARRATOR: Since the Pearl Harbor attack, 1066 00:52:13,380 --> 00:52:16,509 a vast American army has been amassing, 1067 00:52:16,592 --> 00:52:19,436 hungry for their first taste of war. 1068 00:52:19,511 --> 00:52:22,060 - MAN 5: People were lined up at the recruiting stations. 1069 00:52:22,139 --> 00:52:24,233 All the boys were up in arms. 1070 00:52:24,308 --> 00:52:26,231 I graduated in February, 1071 00:52:26,310 --> 00:52:30,611 and I was in uniform in March. 1072 00:52:30,689 --> 00:52:33,784 The country had been violated, is what we thought. 1073 00:52:33,859 --> 00:52:36,078 And everybody just wanted to get busy 1074 00:52:36,153 --> 00:52:38,451 and do something about it. 1075 00:52:38,530 --> 00:52:40,953 - NARRATOR: Volunteers and inductees from the draft 1076 00:52:41,033 --> 00:52:43,912 swell the ranks as America rises to become 1077 00:52:43,994 --> 00:52:47,089 the largest military power in the world. 1078 00:52:47,164 --> 00:52:48,507 - COL. FARRELL: Before the war, 1079 00:52:48,582 --> 00:52:50,630 the total strength of the US Army, 1080 00:52:50,709 --> 00:52:52,131 including its Air Corps, 1081 00:52:52,211 --> 00:52:54,305 was well below 200,000. 1082 00:52:54,380 --> 00:52:57,509 There would be over a 40-fold increase 1083 00:52:57,591 --> 00:53:00,686 in the space of 6 years. 1084 00:53:00,761 --> 00:53:03,105 - PROF. KENNEDY: During the war, the armed forces 1085 00:53:03,180 --> 00:53:05,308 encompassed 16 million men under arms. 1086 00:53:05,391 --> 00:53:09,521 That's 13% of the entire population. 1087 00:53:09,603 --> 00:53:11,571 - NARRATOR: With this vast army assembled, 1088 00:53:11,647 --> 00:53:16,118 America is primed for "Operation Torch," 1089 00:53:16,193 --> 00:53:18,537 then the largest amphibious invasion 1090 00:53:18,612 --> 00:53:21,456 in history. 1091 00:53:21,532 --> 00:53:23,876 - Torch actually was a very important rehearsal 1092 00:53:23,951 --> 00:53:26,955 for D-Day-- it was a huge operation. 1093 00:53:27,037 --> 00:53:30,541 It was logistically extremely complex. 1094 00:53:30,624 --> 00:53:32,922 - Torch was a monumental challenge for the US, 1095 00:53:33,001 --> 00:53:35,754 because we hadn't won the Battle of Atlantic yet. 1096 00:53:35,838 --> 00:53:39,138 We have to escort troops, ammunition, supplies 1097 00:53:39,216 --> 00:53:41,719 from the United States direct to North Africa, 1098 00:53:41,802 --> 00:53:45,523 escort troops from Great Britain down to North Africa, 1099 00:53:45,597 --> 00:53:48,567 through waters patrolled by German submarines. 1100 00:53:48,642 --> 00:53:51,395 Then we have to land them on a hostile shore. 1101 00:53:51,478 --> 00:53:54,322 - NARRATOR: November 8, 1942... 1102 00:53:54,398 --> 00:53:56,571 73,000 Allied troops 1103 00:53:56,650 --> 00:53:59,199 disgorge onto the beaches, 1104 00:53:59,278 --> 00:54:02,623 and immediately the problems begin. 1105 00:54:02,698 --> 00:54:05,918 - MAN 6: What we saw in the landings of North Africa 1106 00:54:05,993 --> 00:54:08,621 is a great study in everything that can go wrong 1107 00:54:08,704 --> 00:54:10,047 in an amphibious landing. 1108 00:54:10,122 --> 00:54:12,466 And virtually everything that could go wrong, did go wrong. 1109 00:54:12,541 --> 00:54:15,294 - PETER: The landing craft-- you didn't run out the front, 1110 00:54:15,377 --> 00:54:16,970 right onto the beach. 1111 00:54:17,045 --> 00:54:19,343 Instead you had to jump over the side. 1112 00:54:19,423 --> 00:54:22,472 That, of course, is not the most efficient way to get in there. 1113 00:54:22,551 --> 00:54:25,054 It's the most dangerous-- it's the slowest. 1114 00:54:25,137 --> 00:54:29,142 A number of our craft get stuck on sandbars. 1115 00:54:29,224 --> 00:54:32,228 When they drive them out, the electronics get fried. 1116 00:54:32,311 --> 00:54:34,109 - Fortunately, they're fighting the Vichy French, 1117 00:54:34,188 --> 00:54:35,861 who fight half-heartedly. 1118 00:54:35,939 --> 00:54:39,364 And had they been attacking the Germans in 1944, 1119 00:54:39,443 --> 00:54:41,491 the Japanese in 1944, 1120 00:54:41,570 --> 00:54:43,618 the experience would have been a lot, uh-- 1121 00:54:43,697 --> 00:54:45,449 a lot worse. 1122 00:54:48,118 --> 00:54:50,291 - NARRATOR: As French Vichy troops loyal to Hitler 1123 00:54:50,370 --> 00:54:52,372 capitulate, 1124 00:54:52,456 --> 00:54:54,550 US forces head for Tunisia 1125 00:54:54,625 --> 00:54:56,002 and their first clash 1126 00:54:56,084 --> 00:54:59,304 with the full-strength German war machine. 1127 00:54:59,379 --> 00:55:01,222 - PROF. WAWRO: They're really blissfully ignorant 1128 00:55:01,298 --> 00:55:03,221 of the realities of modern war. 1129 00:55:03,300 --> 00:55:05,541 I mean they've got their trucks, they've got their tanks, 1130 00:55:05,552 --> 00:55:07,350 they've got their rifles, 1131 00:55:07,429 --> 00:55:10,023 they've got their very complicated chain of command 1132 00:55:10,098 --> 00:55:11,691 from army to corps, division, 1133 00:55:11,767 --> 00:55:12,689 brigade, regiment, battalion. 1134 00:55:12,768 --> 00:55:17,399 They think that they'll do fine. 1135 00:55:17,481 --> 00:55:19,483 - NARRATOR: US forces engage Rommel 1136 00:55:19,566 --> 00:55:21,568 outside the town of Faid. 1137 00:55:24,321 --> 00:55:26,164 Making an initial breakthrough, 1138 00:55:26,240 --> 00:55:28,868 they pursue retreating panzer divisions. 1139 00:55:31,995 --> 00:55:36,216 From space, Rommel's master tactic is revealed-- 1140 00:55:36,291 --> 00:55:38,134 the panzers are decoys, 1141 00:55:38,210 --> 00:55:42,090 luring US forces into a trap. 1142 00:55:42,172 --> 00:55:44,174 - CHRIS: They fall prey to the techniques 1143 00:55:44,258 --> 00:55:46,260 of double envelopment by the Germans, 1144 00:55:46,343 --> 00:55:49,313 with some very good weapons like the German 88. 1145 00:55:49,388 --> 00:55:53,143 - The 88mm gun was literally 1146 00:55:53,225 --> 00:55:56,695 a world-class anti-tank weapon. 1147 00:55:56,770 --> 00:56:00,570 Not only could it shoot at a further distance, 1148 00:56:00,649 --> 00:56:03,323 but it had an incredible kill rate. 1149 00:56:03,402 --> 00:56:05,154 It's basically just lethal. 1150 00:56:05,237 --> 00:56:07,990 This thing is diabolic. 1151 00:56:08,073 --> 00:56:11,373 - COL. FARRELL: In many cases, Americans either surrendered 1152 00:56:11,451 --> 00:56:14,705 or dropped their weapons and ran. 1153 00:56:14,788 --> 00:56:18,258 The American performance, to put it charitably, 1154 00:56:18,333 --> 00:56:21,177 was--was abysmal. 1155 00:56:21,253 --> 00:56:24,678 - NARRATOR: US forces are pushed back in to Kasserine Pass, 1156 00:56:24,756 --> 00:56:26,758 where under constant attack, 1157 00:56:26,842 --> 00:56:29,470 the untested units fall apart. 1158 00:56:29,553 --> 00:56:31,476 - PROF. KENNEDY: To raise an armed force 1159 00:56:31,555 --> 00:56:33,557 of 16 million people in a hurry means 1160 00:56:33,640 --> 00:56:35,768 that in the initial stages of armed conflict, 1161 00:56:35,851 --> 00:56:37,819 you're going to have troops in the front line 1162 00:56:37,895 --> 00:56:40,273 who have no taste of battle before this moment. 1163 00:56:40,355 --> 00:56:41,777 Dwight Eisenhower, for example, 1164 00:56:41,857 --> 00:56:43,154 becomes the supreme Allied commander. 1165 00:56:43,233 --> 00:56:45,611 Before World War ll, before his North African campaign, 1166 00:56:45,694 --> 00:56:48,072 he had never heard a bullet fired in anger 1167 00:56:48,155 --> 00:56:49,828 in his entire life. 1168 00:56:49,907 --> 00:56:53,286 He had no actual combat experience. 1169 00:56:53,368 --> 00:56:56,042 - NARRATOR: Further disaster is averted when reinforcements 1170 00:56:56,121 --> 00:56:59,421 from the British 1st Army arrive. 1171 00:56:59,499 --> 00:57:01,342 And with Field Marshall Montgomery 1172 00:57:01,418 --> 00:57:02,965 approaching from the East, 1173 00:57:03,045 --> 00:57:05,844 Rommel retreats. 1174 00:57:05,923 --> 00:57:09,018 Frank Gervasi witnesses the aftermath. 1175 00:57:10,344 --> 00:57:14,895 - We got to Kasserine Pass, and we had patrols going out, 1176 00:57:14,973 --> 00:57:17,351 and you could still smell the flesh, 1177 00:57:17,434 --> 00:57:19,232 from, you know, the burnt-out tanks 1178 00:57:19,311 --> 00:57:24,989 and human beings, and uh, it was bad. 1179 00:57:25,067 --> 00:57:26,944 We took an awful beating. 1180 00:57:27,027 --> 00:57:29,246 Don't forget, though, we were against 1181 00:57:29,321 --> 00:57:31,790 Germany's best--Rommel's. 1182 00:57:31,865 --> 00:57:34,709 We had the equipment but we didn't have the experience. 1183 00:57:36,662 --> 00:57:40,132 - NARRATOR: America suffers 6,500 casualties. 1184 00:57:40,207 --> 00:57:42,710 Its first land battle in World War ll 1185 00:57:42,793 --> 00:57:44,921 is a disaster. 1186 00:57:45,003 --> 00:57:48,132 - Kasserine was a tremendous defeat for the United States. 1187 00:57:48,215 --> 00:57:50,638 There's just no way to sugar-coat that. 1188 00:57:50,717 --> 00:57:52,970 On the other hand, Kasserine is the best thing 1189 00:57:53,053 --> 00:57:54,726 that ever happened to the US Army. 1190 00:57:54,805 --> 00:57:56,728 Better to get your butt kicked there 1191 00:57:56,807 --> 00:57:58,480 than get your butt kicked in Normandy. 1192 00:57:58,558 --> 00:58:01,937 - There are some changes made in policies, 1193 00:58:02,020 --> 00:58:03,397 in how we're going to operate, 1194 00:58:03,480 --> 00:58:05,403 but there are also some key leadership changes. 1195 00:58:05,482 --> 00:58:07,325 You've got Eisenhower earning his spurs. 1196 00:58:07,401 --> 00:58:09,153 You've got George Patton. 1197 00:58:09,236 --> 00:58:11,364 And the lessons learned in North Africa 1198 00:58:11,446 --> 00:58:13,824 are gonna be applied for the rest of World War ll. 1199 00:58:15,659 --> 00:58:17,332 - NARRATOR: The new US Army doctrines 1200 00:58:17,411 --> 00:58:20,130 ensure a dramatic turnaround. 1201 00:58:20,205 --> 00:58:23,800 First, Tunisia falls, followed by Sicily, 1202 00:58:23,875 --> 00:58:27,846 preparing the way for the Allied invasion of Italy. 1203 00:58:27,921 --> 00:58:30,265 And on the other side of the world, 1204 00:58:30,340 --> 00:58:34,220 the Pacific war enters a new phase of ferocity. 1205 00:58:34,302 --> 00:58:37,556 - The carnage was phenomenal. 1206 00:58:37,639 --> 00:58:41,519 - [bomb whistles, plane engine roars] 1207 00:58:47,858 --> 00:58:49,656 - NARRATOR: From the ashes of Pearl Harbor, 1208 00:58:49,735 --> 00:58:51,112 the American war machine 1209 00:58:51,194 --> 00:58:53,071 is approaching full potential, 1210 00:58:53,155 --> 00:58:55,954 engaging her enemies on three continents. 1211 00:58:58,285 --> 00:58:59,707 In the Pacific, 1212 00:58:59,786 --> 00:59:03,256 troop numbers grow by 457%. 1213 00:59:03,331 --> 00:59:06,551 Its fleet trebles in size. 1214 00:59:06,626 --> 00:59:08,970 With this vast force assembled, 1215 00:59:09,046 --> 00:59:12,391 America's final drive towards Japan begins. 1216 00:59:13,925 --> 00:59:16,019 - The American strategy is a dual-pronged approach, 1217 00:59:16,094 --> 00:59:18,096 with Admiral Nimitz, 1218 00:59:18,180 --> 00:59:20,603 with the Navy Marines going through the central Pacific, 1219 00:59:20,682 --> 00:59:23,526 General MacArthur with most of the army forces 1220 00:59:23,602 --> 00:59:25,229 coming through the Southwest Pacific-- 1221 00:59:25,312 --> 00:59:27,815 both approaching Japan from different axes. 1222 00:59:30,233 --> 00:59:31,780 - NARRATOR: Admiral Nimitz' flotilla 1223 00:59:31,860 --> 00:59:33,908 is the largest in history-- 1224 00:59:33,987 --> 00:59:35,910 the perfect weapon to destroy 1225 00:59:35,989 --> 00:59:38,788 Japan's defensive strongholds. 1226 00:59:40,327 --> 00:59:42,250 - PETER: it's this massive fleet 1227 00:59:42,329 --> 00:59:45,629 of aircraft carriers, destroyers, 1228 00:59:45,707 --> 00:59:47,880 fast battleships, 1229 00:59:47,959 --> 00:59:50,758 backed by this long logistics train 1230 00:59:50,837 --> 00:59:53,681 of supply ships, oilers, 1231 00:59:53,757 --> 00:59:55,851 hospital ships-- you name it. 1232 00:59:55,926 --> 00:59:57,928 This thing was lethality 1233 00:59:58,011 --> 01:00:01,231 and industrialization personified. 1234 01:00:02,974 --> 01:00:05,022 - NARRATOR: The flotilla targets Saipan, 1235 01:00:05,102 --> 01:00:07,070 one of the Mariana islands. 1236 01:00:09,439 --> 01:00:11,692 Its airfields can become the launchpad 1237 01:00:11,775 --> 01:00:16,827 for a sustained aerial bombardment of Japan. 1238 01:00:16,905 --> 01:00:18,578 Emperor Hirohito demands 1239 01:00:18,657 --> 01:00:21,035 his 32,000 troops stationed there 1240 01:00:21,118 --> 01:00:23,917 to defend at all costs. 1241 01:00:23,995 --> 01:00:25,463 - COL. FARRELL: For the Japanese, 1242 01:00:25,539 --> 01:00:28,793 defeat was not an option-- retreat was not an option. 1243 01:00:28,875 --> 01:00:31,424 If it meant losing everything and everyone, 1244 01:00:31,503 --> 01:00:34,302 they would do it in pursuit of victory. 1245 01:00:36,466 --> 01:00:38,434 - NARRATOR: June 1944... 1246 01:00:38,510 --> 01:00:41,229 8,000 US marines hit the beaches 1247 01:00:41,304 --> 01:00:44,183 under intense Japanese fire. 1248 01:00:44,266 --> 01:00:46,610 - PROF. OVERY: For the marines, it was a nightmare. 1249 01:00:46,685 --> 01:00:49,234 At the end of the day, the Japanese have one job, 1250 01:00:49,312 --> 01:00:50,814 which is to inflict heavy casualties 1251 01:00:50,897 --> 01:00:52,149 on the people attacking them. 1252 01:00:52,232 --> 01:00:53,734 If you're in the front line, 1253 01:00:53,817 --> 01:00:55,785 you're going to be one of those casualties. 1254 01:00:58,488 --> 01:01:00,582 - NARRATOR: Facing fanatical resistance, 1255 01:01:00,657 --> 01:01:02,625 a further 80,000 troops land, 1256 01:01:02,701 --> 01:01:05,830 all dependent on naval support. 1257 01:01:07,914 --> 01:01:09,962 But what US Commander Admiral Spruance 1258 01:01:10,041 --> 01:01:13,511 cannot see... 1259 01:01:13,587 --> 01:01:17,308 are 55 Japanese ships rapidly approaching. 1260 01:01:19,467 --> 01:01:21,811 - For the Japanese, this really was gonna be 1261 01:01:21,887 --> 01:01:23,139 their last shot. 1262 01:01:23,221 --> 01:01:25,724 They had to have success here in this particular battle, 1263 01:01:25,807 --> 01:01:28,435 or they were not gonna be ever able to field 1264 01:01:28,518 --> 01:01:30,816 this kind of force again. 1265 01:01:30,896 --> 01:01:32,864 - NARRATOR: Responding to danger, 1266 01:01:32,939 --> 01:01:34,156 Spruance splits his force, 1267 01:01:34,232 --> 01:01:37,532 dispatching one half to engage the Japanese fleet. 1268 01:01:44,492 --> 01:01:46,415 As the two forces clash, 1269 01:01:46,494 --> 01:01:49,543 US technological superiority dominates, 1270 01:01:49,623 --> 01:01:53,844 most notably 480 newly developed Hellcats. 1271 01:01:54,961 --> 01:01:56,963 - PETER: The Hellcat's just an incredible weapon. 1272 01:01:57,047 --> 01:01:58,173 It's fast. 1273 01:01:58,256 --> 01:02:00,600 It can take hits and still keep going on. 1274 01:02:00,675 --> 01:02:01,801 It's well armored. 1275 01:02:01,885 --> 01:02:04,138 And on top of that, it's now flown 1276 01:02:04,221 --> 01:02:07,270 by elite pilots. 1277 01:02:07,349 --> 01:02:09,443 - The Japanese lost most of their well-trained pilots 1278 01:02:09,517 --> 01:02:12,145 in other battles-- they couldn't replace them. 1279 01:02:12,229 --> 01:02:13,902 They didn't have the fuel to train. 1280 01:02:13,980 --> 01:02:15,653 Their aircraft weren't as good. 1281 01:02:15,732 --> 01:02:18,986 - And that's what really creates the turkey shoot 1282 01:02:19,069 --> 01:02:20,616 of the Battle of the Philippines Sea. 1283 01:02:23,365 --> 01:02:25,083 - NARRATOR: Over the next 8 hours, 1284 01:02:25,158 --> 01:02:28,287 429 Japanese planes are destroyed, 1285 01:02:28,370 --> 01:02:30,498 compared to 29 American-- 1286 01:02:30,580 --> 01:02:33,925 a kill ratio of 15 to 1. 1287 01:02:34,000 --> 01:02:36,048 - DR. CRANE: The scale of the slaughter 1288 01:02:36,127 --> 01:02:37,925 between the American pilots and the Japanese 1289 01:02:38,004 --> 01:02:40,302 is significant enough where, after the battle of Marianas, 1290 01:02:40,382 --> 01:02:41,634 the Japanese aircraft carrier force 1291 01:02:41,716 --> 01:02:44,595 is no longer a factor in the war in the Pacific. 1292 01:02:47,555 --> 01:02:49,523 - NARRATOR: On land, American troops 1293 01:02:49,599 --> 01:02:53,024 continue to face ferocious resistance. 1294 01:02:53,103 --> 01:02:54,525 - PROF. KENNEDY: The Pacific war was 1295 01:02:54,604 --> 01:02:57,699 a bitter and cruel war, 1296 01:02:57,774 --> 01:02:59,868 but at Saipan, it became more and more evident 1297 01:02:59,943 --> 01:03:04,119 how deep was the Japanese ferocity 1298 01:03:04,197 --> 01:03:05,369 or the ferociousness 1299 01:03:05,448 --> 01:03:08,543 of the Japanese capacity to resist. 1300 01:03:08,618 --> 01:03:11,246 There are these hair-raising stories about how the Americans 1301 01:03:11,329 --> 01:03:14,424 had to lower drums of gasoline and explode them 1302 01:03:14,499 --> 01:03:17,048 in the caves in which the Japanese were hiding, 1303 01:03:17,127 --> 01:03:18,674 because they could not induce people 1304 01:03:18,753 --> 01:03:21,973 to come out and surrender. 1305 01:03:22,048 --> 01:03:25,143 - NARRATOR: The suicidal fervor is not confined to soldiers. 1306 01:03:29,806 --> 01:03:31,808 Eight thousand Japanese civilians 1307 01:03:31,891 --> 01:03:33,438 leap to their deaths. 1308 01:03:33,518 --> 01:03:35,111 - PROF. KENNEDY: The American witnesses 1309 01:03:35,186 --> 01:03:37,154 could not believe their eyes that they were seeing 1310 01:03:37,230 --> 01:03:39,858 this mass suicide of Japanese civilians, 1311 01:03:39,941 --> 01:03:42,035 including women and children-- 1312 01:03:42,110 --> 01:03:44,659 mothers killing their own babies-- 1313 01:03:44,738 --> 01:03:48,208 rather than surrender to the Americans. 1314 01:03:48,283 --> 01:03:49,910 - NARRATOR: When Saipan falls, 1315 01:03:49,993 --> 01:03:52,746 over 3,400 Americans lie dead, 1316 01:03:52,829 --> 01:03:55,924 alongside 46,000 Japanese, 1317 01:03:55,999 --> 01:03:59,879 half of whom are civilian suicides. 1318 01:03:59,961 --> 01:04:02,635 It is a mere taste of what's to come. 1319 01:04:05,091 --> 01:04:07,219 - NARRATOR: January 1945, 1320 01:04:07,302 --> 01:04:09,680 American Air Force General Curtis LeMay 1321 01:04:09,763 --> 01:04:11,731 arrives at the conquered airfields 1322 01:04:11,806 --> 01:04:15,026 of the Marianas. 1323 01:04:15,101 --> 01:04:16,819 The war in the Pacific... 1324 01:04:16,895 --> 01:04:18,693 - [bomb explodes] 1325 01:04:18,772 --> 01:04:21,571 - NARRATOR: ...is about to ruthlessly escalate. 1326 01:04:21,649 --> 01:04:23,617 - COL. FARRELL: Curtis LeMay believed 1327 01:04:23,693 --> 01:04:26,412 there should be no hesitation and no moderation 1328 01:04:26,488 --> 01:04:29,241 in bringing destruction to the enemy, 1329 01:04:29,324 --> 01:04:32,043 and the surest, most effective way to do that 1330 01:04:32,118 --> 01:04:36,123 would be through massive, unrestrained strategic bombing. 1331 01:04:36,206 --> 01:04:38,083 - He was going out to destroy 1332 01:04:38,166 --> 01:04:41,386 the industrial power of Japan. 1333 01:04:41,461 --> 01:04:44,260 And the kindling for all those fires he was lighting 1334 01:04:44,339 --> 01:04:46,512 to burn down the factories 1335 01:04:46,591 --> 01:04:48,639 happened to be houses with people in them. 1336 01:04:51,429 --> 01:04:52,897 - NARRATOR: March 9... 1337 01:04:52,972 --> 01:04:55,851 over 300 B-29's reach Tokyo. 1338 01:04:58,728 --> 01:05:00,776 They systematically lay down 1339 01:05:00,855 --> 01:05:06,112 1,665 tons of M-69 incendiary clusters 1340 01:05:06,194 --> 01:05:08,947 over the wooden city. 1341 01:05:09,030 --> 01:05:11,658 It remains the most destructive air raid 1342 01:05:11,741 --> 01:05:14,039 in the history of mankind. 1343 01:05:17,414 --> 01:05:20,839 - The Japanese later called the early fire raids 1344 01:05:20,917 --> 01:05:22,419 the "night of the black snow," 1345 01:05:22,502 --> 01:05:25,756 because of the debris and the impact 1346 01:05:25,839 --> 01:05:28,467 of these particular raids on their lives. 1347 01:05:28,550 --> 01:05:30,678 The master bomber who was watching the raids 1348 01:05:30,760 --> 01:05:33,058 said you could see the fires 150 miles away. 1349 01:05:35,515 --> 01:05:39,315 You had asphalt melting in the streets. 1350 01:05:39,394 --> 01:05:41,647 You had glass melting out of buildings. 1351 01:05:44,107 --> 01:05:46,781 A lot the air crews were really shaken up by the results. 1352 01:05:46,860 --> 01:05:49,363 Tail gunners reported watching people burning to death 1353 01:05:49,446 --> 01:05:51,949 and burning rivers covered with napalm. 1354 01:05:54,159 --> 01:05:56,332 Japanese doctors wrote about watching the debris 1355 01:05:56,411 --> 01:05:57,913 floating in rivers afterwards, 1356 01:05:57,996 --> 01:06:00,465 and they couldn't tell if it was bodies or sticks of wood. 1357 01:06:02,542 --> 01:06:06,422 - NARRATOR: Sixteen square miles are razed to the ground. 1358 01:06:06,504 --> 01:06:09,849 The inferno claims 90,000 civilian lives 1359 01:06:09,924 --> 01:06:14,145 and leaves over 1 million homeless. 1360 01:06:14,220 --> 01:06:16,348 On the other side of the Atlantic, 1361 01:06:16,431 --> 01:06:18,274 Allied forces converge 1362 01:06:18,349 --> 01:06:20,977 to prepare for an equally decisive breakthrough 1363 01:06:21,060 --> 01:06:23,529 in the liberation of Europe. 1364 01:06:23,605 --> 01:06:26,609 - For the Allies, the D-day landings 1365 01:06:26,691 --> 01:06:29,114 represented the success or failure 1366 01:06:29,194 --> 01:06:32,243 of the entire war. 1367 01:06:32,322 --> 01:06:35,417 - But the outcome really rested on a knife edge. 1368 01:06:35,492 --> 01:06:39,292 - [machine guns firing, bombs exploding] 1369 01:06:46,085 --> 01:06:48,588 - NARRATOR: November, 1943... 1370 01:06:48,671 --> 01:06:50,924 Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill 1371 01:06:51,007 --> 01:06:53,977 meet in Tehran to plan "Operation Overlord," 1372 01:06:54,052 --> 01:06:56,430 the invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe. 1373 01:06:59,807 --> 01:07:02,856 Churchill warns of the challenges that await them. 1374 01:07:02,936 --> 01:07:05,359 - The British had learned firsthand 1375 01:07:05,438 --> 01:07:08,066 how capable, how effective a fighting force 1376 01:07:08,149 --> 01:07:10,026 the Wehrmacht was. 1377 01:07:10,109 --> 01:07:13,409 - NARRATOR: Britain's experience is chastening-- 1378 01:07:13,488 --> 01:07:16,958 evacuated from Dunkirk in 1940, 1379 01:07:17,033 --> 01:07:20,833 driven from Norway and Greece. 1380 01:07:20,912 --> 01:07:22,414 Yet despite the dangers, 1381 01:07:22,497 --> 01:07:25,341 the Allies determine to risk everything 1382 01:07:25,416 --> 01:07:29,011 on a full-scale cross-Channel invasion 1383 01:07:29,087 --> 01:07:34,810 into the teeth of the Nazi defenses. 1384 01:07:34,884 --> 01:07:37,387 - COL. FARRELL: In order for D-Day to succeed, 1385 01:07:37,470 --> 01:07:40,974 it required four distinct events to happen. 1386 01:07:41,057 --> 01:07:43,936 First, the Allies needed the momentum 1387 01:07:44,018 --> 01:07:46,191 of manpower and equipment 1388 01:07:46,271 --> 01:07:47,614 to make it to the beach 1389 01:07:47,689 --> 01:07:50,033 and continue to reinforce the beachhead 1390 01:07:50,108 --> 01:07:52,361 once the landings were secure. 1391 01:07:52,443 --> 01:07:54,537 Secondly was air supremacy. 1392 01:07:54,612 --> 01:07:57,035 The Allies had to prevent the Germans 1393 01:07:57,115 --> 01:08:00,836 from reinforcing their positions on the beachhead. 1394 01:08:00,910 --> 01:08:04,540 Also, the Allies needed a major Soviet offensive 1395 01:08:04,622 --> 01:08:06,750 so that Germany would be sandwiched 1396 01:08:06,833 --> 01:08:09,086 between two invading armies. 1397 01:08:09,168 --> 01:08:11,921 And finally, the element of surprise. 1398 01:08:12,005 --> 01:08:14,975 If the Germans had been aware that the invasion was coming, 1399 01:08:15,049 --> 01:08:18,394 it would have certainly failed. 1400 01:08:18,469 --> 01:08:20,312 - NARRATOR: To win the intelligence war, 1401 01:08:20,388 --> 01:08:26,236 the Allies launch "Operation Fortitude." 1402 01:08:26,311 --> 01:08:28,780 - Operation Fortitude stands to the present day 1403 01:08:28,855 --> 01:08:31,779 as arguably the greatest deception plan 1404 01:08:31,858 --> 01:08:33,735 in modern warfare. 1405 01:08:36,070 --> 01:08:38,493 - NARRATOR: In an audacious act of misdirection, 1406 01:08:38,573 --> 01:08:41,167 a decoy army of 11 ghost divisions 1407 01:08:41,242 --> 01:08:42,960 figureheaded by General Patton 1408 01:08:43,036 --> 01:08:46,040 assembles opposite Calais. 1409 01:08:46,122 --> 01:08:49,001 - They had to really trick the German high command 1410 01:08:49,083 --> 01:08:51,302 into thinking that Calais, 1411 01:08:51,377 --> 01:08:53,220 the shortest route across the Channel, 1412 01:08:53,296 --> 01:08:57,142 was the way that the invasion was going to be mounted. 1413 01:08:57,216 --> 01:08:59,184 It had dummy tanks, 1414 01:08:59,260 --> 01:09:01,433 dummy airstrips, dummy hangers. 1415 01:09:01,512 --> 01:09:03,890 And they let the German reconnaissance aircraft 1416 01:09:03,973 --> 01:09:06,692 fly over these areas and say, "Oh, here's a huge army. 1417 01:09:06,768 --> 01:09:09,692 This is clearly where they're going to put their main effort." 1418 01:09:11,564 --> 01:09:13,987 - NARRATOR: With Fortitude blinding the Axis, 1419 01:09:14,067 --> 01:09:16,820 the real invasion force secretly assembles... 1420 01:09:20,156 --> 01:09:23,786 9½ million tons of supplies, 1421 01:09:23,868 --> 01:09:27,668 4,000 amphibious vessels, 1422 01:09:27,747 --> 01:09:30,466 and over 1½ million troops. 1423 01:09:32,168 --> 01:09:33,385 The man charged 1424 01:09:33,461 --> 01:09:35,541 with the immense logistical challenge of the landings 1425 01:09:35,546 --> 01:09:39,426 is British Naval mastermind, Sir Bertram Ramsey. 1426 01:09:39,509 --> 01:09:42,809 - Sir Bertram Ramsey's plan was meticulous, 1427 01:09:42,887 --> 01:09:45,390 it was complex, it was rehearsed, 1428 01:09:45,473 --> 01:09:47,646 and it was thorough in every way. 1429 01:09:49,811 --> 01:09:51,905 - NARRATOR: The plan is astonishing. 1430 01:09:51,979 --> 01:09:54,073 Almost 7,000 vessels 1431 01:09:54,148 --> 01:09:56,367 will be loaded with men and supplies 1432 01:09:56,442 --> 01:10:00,037 and moved in secret to the assembly points. 1433 01:10:00,113 --> 01:10:01,911 At a pre-determined time, 1434 01:10:01,989 --> 01:10:04,083 they will navigate through narrow channels 1435 01:10:04,158 --> 01:10:05,501 cleared of mines, 1436 01:10:05,576 --> 01:10:09,626 towards enemy shores through unpredictable seas. 1437 01:10:09,706 --> 01:10:12,505 Simultaneously, naval screens will be mounted 1438 01:10:12,583 --> 01:10:15,757 to protect against Axis counterattacks. 1439 01:10:15,837 --> 01:10:17,805 - LTG MASON: The scope and depth of it-- 1440 01:10:17,880 --> 01:10:19,302 it's just off the scale. 1441 01:10:19,382 --> 01:10:21,430 Me personally, I've been involved in planning 1442 01:10:21,509 --> 01:10:24,012 for things like Desert Storm, 1443 01:10:24,095 --> 01:10:26,189 uh, Operation Iraqi Freedom-- 1444 01:10:26,264 --> 01:10:28,141 the early pieces of it-- and even that, 1445 01:10:28,224 --> 01:10:31,068 with big computers and lots of smart guys working it, 1446 01:10:31,144 --> 01:10:32,691 it was daunting then. 1447 01:10:35,314 --> 01:10:37,282 - NARRATOR: Getting the Allied forces to the beachheads 1448 01:10:37,358 --> 01:10:40,077 is just the start. 1449 01:10:40,153 --> 01:10:43,703 Awaiting them is Hitler's Atlantic wall, 1450 01:10:43,781 --> 01:10:47,376 a defensive network 1,600 miles long 1451 01:10:47,452 --> 01:10:51,252 and considered by the Führer as unbreachable. 1452 01:10:51,330 --> 01:10:53,879 - PETER: it's this combination of everything 1453 01:10:53,958 --> 01:10:57,303 from millions of mines, 1454 01:10:57,378 --> 01:10:59,221 specific defenses 1455 01:10:59,297 --> 01:11:02,597 designed to rip the bottom of a landing craft. 1456 01:11:02,675 --> 01:11:05,519 Then you get to machine gun bunkers 1457 01:11:05,595 --> 01:11:07,939 with interlocking fires, 1458 01:11:08,014 --> 01:11:10,483 6-inch cannons--you name it. 1459 01:11:10,558 --> 01:11:13,186 It's just a nasty, nasty piece of work. 1460 01:11:13,269 --> 01:11:15,522 - DR. CRANE: You know, there are trained troops 1461 01:11:15,605 --> 01:11:17,073 who've been there for years sighting 1462 01:11:17,148 --> 01:11:18,900 every avenue of approach off the beach. 1463 01:11:18,983 --> 01:11:21,202 And you know there are gonna be massive counterattacks-- 1464 01:11:21,277 --> 01:11:22,779 the Germans are masters at that. 1465 01:11:22,862 --> 01:11:24,364 So there's just so much uncertainty. 1466 01:11:29,202 --> 01:11:30,642 - NARRATOR: The window of opportunity 1467 01:11:30,703 --> 01:11:34,003 is desperately narrow. 1468 01:11:34,081 --> 01:11:36,504 Supreme Allied Commander Eisenhower 1469 01:11:36,584 --> 01:11:38,837 sets the date... 1470 01:11:38,920 --> 01:11:43,175 June 5, 1944. 1471 01:11:43,257 --> 01:11:44,850 - COL. FARRELL: Once Eisenhower 1472 01:11:44,926 --> 01:11:45,848 made the decision, 1473 01:11:45,927 --> 01:11:47,304 it was irrevocable-- 1474 01:11:47,386 --> 01:11:48,683 there was no plan B. 1475 01:11:48,763 --> 01:11:51,232 This was it--go for broke. 1476 01:11:51,307 --> 01:11:53,309 Either the invasion would succeed 1477 01:11:53,392 --> 01:11:55,486 or the invasion attempt 1478 01:11:55,561 --> 01:11:57,529 would have to be put off indefinitely. 1479 01:11:57,605 --> 01:12:01,075 - Dwight Eisenhower sat down and wrote a little note 1480 01:12:01,150 --> 01:12:04,245 taking blame for the failure of the landings 1481 01:12:04,320 --> 01:12:07,369 that he was prepared to deliver if it did fail. 1482 01:12:07,448 --> 01:12:10,167 No one on the Allied side saw this as a sure thing. 1483 01:12:10,243 --> 01:12:12,587 - [bombs exploding] 1484 01:12:12,662 --> 01:12:15,040 - NARRATOR: As the Allies bomb the French infrastructure 1485 01:12:15,122 --> 01:12:17,500 connecting Normandy to the east, 1486 01:12:17,583 --> 01:12:19,460 3 million servicemen 1487 01:12:19,544 --> 01:12:23,515 are locked away from the population. 1488 01:12:23,589 --> 01:12:26,433 Coastal towns are locked down. 1489 01:12:26,509 --> 01:12:31,185 The fate of the world hangs in the balance. 1490 01:12:40,398 --> 01:12:44,528 After an agonizing 24-hour delay due to bad weather, 1491 01:12:44,610 --> 01:12:47,204 "Overlord," the most important Allied operation 1492 01:12:47,280 --> 01:12:48,406 of World War ll 1493 01:12:48,489 --> 01:12:51,959 is set in motion. 1494 01:12:52,034 --> 01:12:54,537 Before the armada embarks for Normandy, 1495 01:12:54,620 --> 01:12:56,042 the Allies launch 1496 01:12:56,122 --> 01:13:00,423 one final master class of deception. 1497 01:13:00,501 --> 01:13:02,378 To convince the Germans 1498 01:13:02,461 --> 01:13:04,714 that Calais is the invasion site, 1499 01:13:04,797 --> 01:13:07,971 British bombers circle at low altitude, 1500 01:13:08,050 --> 01:13:11,680 dropping tons of metallic chaff into the air. 1501 01:13:11,762 --> 01:13:15,016 - CHRIS: This created a huge radar registry for the Germans, 1502 01:13:15,099 --> 01:13:18,603 and this phantom army that has been constructed in their minds 1503 01:13:18,686 --> 01:13:21,690 through documents and fake bases-- 1504 01:13:21,772 --> 01:13:23,945 now it starts to come alive. 1505 01:13:24,025 --> 01:13:27,245 - Totally threw the German defensive planning. 1506 01:13:27,320 --> 01:13:29,869 It threw it into disarray. 1507 01:13:29,947 --> 01:13:31,620 - NARRATOR: With the misdirection campaign 1508 01:13:31,699 --> 01:13:33,121 underway, 1509 01:13:33,200 --> 01:13:36,329 the invasion force heads towards its targets-- 1510 01:13:36,412 --> 01:13:38,506 five beachheads 1511 01:13:38,581 --> 01:13:41,334 and a cliff-top gun emplacement at Pointe Du Hoc. 1512 01:13:46,005 --> 01:13:47,348 Ahead of the transports, 1513 01:13:47,423 --> 01:13:51,428 an aerial and naval barrage pounds the coastal defenses. 1514 01:13:51,510 --> 01:13:54,229 Despite the assault, the men on the landing craft 1515 01:13:54,305 --> 01:13:57,275 come under ferocious German fire. 1516 01:13:57,350 --> 01:13:58,852 - MICHAEL: it was confusing. 1517 01:13:58,935 --> 01:14:01,313 The German Planes were going right over us. 1518 01:14:01,395 --> 01:14:04,774 There was these bombs and guns going off and everything else. 1519 01:14:04,857 --> 01:14:09,863 - Some of the boats, they got hit by bombs already, 1520 01:14:09,946 --> 01:14:12,870 and all you could see was you don't know who they were-- 1521 01:14:12,949 --> 01:14:14,872 see guys laying in the water, 1522 01:14:14,951 --> 01:14:17,329 some with limbs off and arms. 1523 01:14:17,411 --> 01:14:20,790 There was more than being frightened on the boats. 1524 01:14:20,873 --> 01:14:23,171 Some guys were crying a little bit. 1525 01:14:23,250 --> 01:14:25,127 Some guys was even urinating. 1526 01:14:25,211 --> 01:14:28,715 - We were all nervous-- everybody was-- 1527 01:14:28,798 --> 01:14:30,892 but there was nothing you could do about it. 1528 01:14:30,967 --> 01:14:34,722 You knew what had to do and it had to be done. 1529 01:14:34,804 --> 01:14:36,772 - NARRATOR: Charles Barley and Michael Vernillo 1530 01:14:36,847 --> 01:14:39,020 are amongst the first to hit Omaha, 1531 01:14:39,100 --> 01:14:43,480 the most heavily defended German position. 1532 01:14:43,562 --> 01:14:46,566 - A lot of guys were in a bunch getting off the boat, 1533 01:14:46,649 --> 01:14:48,617 and they were killed instantly, 1534 01:14:48,693 --> 01:14:51,196 you might as well say. 1535 01:14:51,278 --> 01:14:53,872 We got into the water. 1536 01:14:53,948 --> 01:14:55,871 The water was up to my stomach, 1537 01:14:55,950 --> 01:14:59,329 and I said to myself, I said, "Goodbye, Charlie--you're gone." 1538 01:15:02,707 --> 01:15:05,506 And then it was really a terrible feeling in the water. 1539 01:15:05,584 --> 01:15:07,427 You can see there's bodies laying around, 1540 01:15:07,503 --> 01:15:09,255 and you couldn't identify them... 1541 01:15:09,338 --> 01:15:12,888 it was really nasty-- really bloody. 1542 01:15:12,967 --> 01:15:14,344 - COL. FARRELL: Those fortunate enough 1543 01:15:14,427 --> 01:15:15,804 to make it off the boats-- 1544 01:15:15,886 --> 01:15:17,479 the scene they would have confronted, 1545 01:15:17,555 --> 01:15:21,685 it's almost unimaginable. 1546 01:15:21,767 --> 01:15:24,987 They would have been suffering still from seasickness. 1547 01:15:25,062 --> 01:15:26,939 They would have heard the whirring of bullets 1548 01:15:27,023 --> 01:15:28,525 above their heads. 1549 01:15:28,607 --> 01:15:30,280 They would have seen in front of them 1550 01:15:30,359 --> 01:15:33,408 dead and dying American soldiers. 1551 01:15:33,487 --> 01:15:35,455 But it was more than chaos. 1552 01:15:35,531 --> 01:15:38,080 It was deadly chaos. 1553 01:15:38,159 --> 01:15:40,207 - NARRATOR: As the Allies continue to land 1554 01:15:40,286 --> 01:15:42,129 against merciless German fire, 1555 01:15:42,204 --> 01:15:45,299 the casualty rate soars. 1556 01:15:49,545 --> 01:15:51,718 - But after 15 hours of fighting, 1557 01:15:51,797 --> 01:15:53,799 all beachheads are taken 1558 01:15:53,883 --> 01:15:58,730 with Pointe Du Hoc falling the following day. 1559 01:15:58,804 --> 01:16:01,774 The Allies suffer 10,000 casualties, 1560 01:16:01,849 --> 01:16:06,025 but it is blood shed achieving the almost-impossible. 1561 01:16:06,103 --> 01:16:10,358 They have a foothold in Nazi-occupied Europe. 1562 01:16:12,735 --> 01:16:14,829 - For Hitler, this was 1563 01:16:14,904 --> 01:16:17,248 the nightmare come to pass. 1564 01:16:17,323 --> 01:16:20,042 - We basically, you know, 1565 01:16:20,117 --> 01:16:22,870 signed the death certificate of Nazi Germany 1566 01:16:22,953 --> 01:16:24,876 on June 6, 1944. 1567 01:16:28,667 --> 01:16:30,544 - COL. FARRELL: After weeks and weeks 1568 01:16:30,628 --> 01:16:33,006 of being bottled up in the Normandy beachhead, 1569 01:16:33,089 --> 01:16:36,093 the breakout that occurred exceeded expectations. 1570 01:16:38,010 --> 01:16:41,105 - NARRATOR: The success is down to the network of supply lines 1571 01:16:41,180 --> 01:16:44,855 chasing the front-line soldiers. 1572 01:16:44,934 --> 01:16:47,437 Connecting France with the war depot of Britain 1573 01:16:47,520 --> 01:16:50,364 are artificial Mulberry harbors, 1574 01:16:50,439 --> 01:16:53,238 landing 2½ million men, 1575 01:16:53,317 --> 01:16:55,570 4 million tons of supplies, 1576 01:16:55,653 --> 01:16:58,827 and 500,000 vehicles within the first 10 months. 1577 01:17:01,033 --> 01:17:04,253 Fueling the offensive is "Operation Pluto"... 1578 01:17:04,328 --> 01:17:07,081 70 miles of undersea pipeline 1579 01:17:07,164 --> 01:17:12,967 pumping up to a million gallons of fuel per day into France. 1580 01:17:13,045 --> 01:17:15,125 - LTG MASON: Those tons and those millions of gallons 1581 01:17:15,131 --> 01:17:16,758 of fuel were on a scale 1582 01:17:16,841 --> 01:17:18,809 that probably won't be replicated in the future, 1583 01:17:18,884 --> 01:17:22,388 so what they accomplished might be unique 1584 01:17:22,471 --> 01:17:25,850 in human history, really. 1585 01:17:25,933 --> 01:17:28,561 - NARRATOR: From space, the speed of advance 1586 01:17:28,644 --> 01:17:30,567 is astounding. 1587 01:17:30,646 --> 01:17:33,616 August 19... Paris is liberated, 1588 01:17:33,691 --> 01:17:36,035 followed by Rouen, Verdun, 1589 01:17:36,110 --> 01:17:39,580 Antwerp and Brussels. 1590 01:17:39,655 --> 01:17:42,784 By September, the Allies reach the Siegfried Line 1591 01:17:42,867 --> 01:17:45,711 on the cusp of the German Fatherland. 1592 01:17:45,786 --> 01:17:48,790 Hitler launches his final, desperate counterattack-- 1593 01:17:48,873 --> 01:17:50,841 the Battle of the Bulge. 1594 01:17:50,916 --> 01:17:54,295 Despite heavy losses, the Allies prevail 1595 01:17:54,378 --> 01:17:57,473 and Nazi Germany stands on the abyss. 1596 01:17:59,216 --> 01:18:01,264 - Hitler's gamble in the Ardennes 1597 01:18:01,343 --> 01:18:03,846 basically ensures the end of the Reich. 1598 01:18:03,929 --> 01:18:06,102 This is his last operational force he had 1599 01:18:06,182 --> 01:18:08,059 where he could try to influence 1600 01:18:08,142 --> 01:18:10,611 the pace of either front, East or West. 1601 01:18:10,686 --> 01:18:12,609 Once he threw that force away, 1602 01:18:12,688 --> 01:18:14,816 the American-Soviet conquering 1603 01:18:14,899 --> 01:18:17,368 of the Reich in the next year was inevitable. 1604 01:18:21,155 --> 01:18:25,001 - NARRATOR: The War in Europe nears its climax. 1605 01:18:25,075 --> 01:18:28,170 On the other side of the planet, the drive towards Japan 1606 01:18:28,245 --> 01:18:33,968 is also approaching its bloody conclusion. 1607 01:18:34,043 --> 01:18:36,045 But every island invaded 1608 01:18:36,128 --> 01:18:39,473 is coming at increasingly higher cost. 1609 01:18:39,548 --> 01:18:42,097 - PROF WAWRO: At every stage, the ferocity 1610 01:18:42,176 --> 01:18:45,726 and intensity of Japanese defense increases. 1611 01:18:45,804 --> 01:18:49,308 What they thought were suicidal defense tactics in Saipan 1612 01:18:49,391 --> 01:18:51,485 are redoubled at Iwo Jima. 1613 01:18:57,233 --> 01:19:00,362 - NARRATOR: February 19, 1945... 1614 01:19:00,444 --> 01:19:02,446 60,000 US Marines 1615 01:19:02,529 --> 01:19:04,657 storm the island of Iwo Jima, 1616 01:19:04,740 --> 01:19:08,370 where a battle of unrivaled brutality begins. 1617 01:19:08,452 --> 01:19:11,501 - [machine guns firing, bombs exploding] 1618 01:19:14,208 --> 01:19:15,926 - COL. FARRELL: The fighting on Iwo Jima 1619 01:19:16,001 --> 01:19:18,925 stands as arguably the fiercest fighting 1620 01:19:19,004 --> 01:19:21,052 that US military personnel 1621 01:19:21,131 --> 01:19:23,099 have ever experienced. 1622 01:19:23,175 --> 01:19:24,973 There was no amount of punishment 1623 01:19:25,052 --> 01:19:26,850 could be inflicted on the Japanese 1624 01:19:26,929 --> 01:19:29,227 that would cause them to lose their will. 1625 01:19:31,308 --> 01:19:32,935 - PETER: Essentially they've decided 1626 01:19:33,018 --> 01:19:35,146 that they are going to die there. 1627 01:19:35,229 --> 01:19:37,778 And when you have that kind of suicidal fervor, 1628 01:19:37,856 --> 01:19:41,577 it means that the sort of tactics 1629 01:19:41,652 --> 01:19:44,121 that you might have used previously 1630 01:19:44,196 --> 01:19:46,540 don't work. 1631 01:19:46,615 --> 01:19:49,994 And so we start using flamethrowers, 1632 01:19:50,077 --> 01:19:52,921 napalm, tanks up close-- 1633 01:19:52,997 --> 01:19:54,795 a style of battle 1634 01:19:54,873 --> 01:19:58,173 that raises the level of violence, 1635 01:19:58,252 --> 01:19:59,970 even past what we've seen 1636 01:20:00,045 --> 01:20:02,047 in earlier parts of World War ll, 1637 01:20:02,131 --> 01:20:05,305 which is hard to imagine. 1638 01:20:05,384 --> 01:20:07,386 - NARRATOR: When Iwo Jima falls, 1639 01:20:07,469 --> 01:20:10,439 Japan suffers 20,000 casualties 1640 01:20:10,514 --> 01:20:13,393 compared to 23,000 American, 1641 01:20:13,475 --> 01:20:15,398 the first time US casualties 1642 01:20:15,477 --> 01:20:19,482 exceed that of their enemy. 1643 01:20:19,565 --> 01:20:22,284 As Allied forces prepare to invade Okinawa, 1644 01:20:22,359 --> 01:20:25,863 the proposed launch pad for the invasion of Japan, 1645 01:20:25,946 --> 01:20:28,699 the stakes for both sides are vast. 1646 01:20:30,451 --> 01:20:33,000 - DR. CRANE: The Japanese defenders of Okinawa knew 1647 01:20:33,078 --> 01:20:35,376 that they were not going to survive--they could not win. 1648 01:20:35,456 --> 01:20:38,209 But they hoped that, by causing enough casualties, 1649 01:20:38,292 --> 01:20:40,511 creating enough horror, that it might either 1650 01:20:40,586 --> 01:20:42,964 make the Americans decide not to invade Japan, 1651 01:20:43,047 --> 01:20:44,924 or at least maybe get the Japanese 1652 01:20:45,007 --> 01:20:47,726 a better peace offer of some kind. 1653 01:20:47,801 --> 01:20:50,395 - NARRATOR: April 1, 1945... 1654 01:20:50,471 --> 01:20:54,066 the America armada approaches its target. 1655 01:20:54,141 --> 01:20:57,987 Its scale is unmatched in the Pacific War. 1656 01:20:58,062 --> 01:21:00,440 - Okinawa was a military undertaking 1657 01:21:00,522 --> 01:21:03,150 on a scale that rivaled D-Day-- 1658 01:21:03,233 --> 01:21:05,156 the size of the invasion force, 1659 01:21:05,235 --> 01:21:08,660 the size of the invasion fleet. 1660 01:21:08,739 --> 01:21:10,833 - NARRATOR: One thousand- two hundred warships 1661 01:21:10,908 --> 01:21:13,787 support 3 mass amphibious attack forces 1662 01:21:13,869 --> 01:21:16,748 hitting the beaches. 1663 01:21:16,830 --> 01:21:21,961 More than 170,000 troops land eerily unopposed. 1664 01:21:25,631 --> 01:21:27,178 But unseen by American troops 1665 01:21:27,257 --> 01:21:30,557 are 97,000 Japanese defenders, 1666 01:21:30,636 --> 01:21:34,766 ready to strike with unprecedented savagery. 1667 01:21:34,848 --> 01:21:37,601 - They are taking the Japanese soldier 1668 01:21:37,684 --> 01:21:41,188 and using just his body as a weapon. 1669 01:21:41,271 --> 01:21:44,070 - NARRATOR: Japanese soldiers with 22-lb satchel bombs 1670 01:21:44,149 --> 01:21:46,652 run under tanks. 1671 01:21:46,735 --> 01:21:49,579 Six thousand defenders banzai-charge marines 1672 01:21:49,655 --> 01:21:53,410 armed only with bamboo spears and sidearms. 1673 01:21:53,492 --> 01:21:56,211 - PROF. KENNEDY: In our own time, we make the comparison 1674 01:21:56,286 --> 01:21:58,334 with suicide bombers, but if you can imagine 1675 01:21:58,414 --> 01:22:00,337 where entire Japanese units had 1676 01:22:00,416 --> 01:22:03,590 that depth of commitment that would actually suffer 1677 01:22:03,669 --> 01:22:06,798 mass, essentially suicidal death 1678 01:22:06,880 --> 01:22:09,349 rather than surrender their position-- 1679 01:22:09,425 --> 01:22:12,019 that's a very formidable military obstacle. 1680 01:22:12,094 --> 01:22:14,222 - [plane engines whirring] 1681 01:22:14,304 --> 01:22:17,558 - NARRATOR: At sea, wave after wave of Kamikazes 1682 01:22:17,641 --> 01:22:20,690 crash into US ships. 1683 01:22:20,769 --> 01:22:23,613 - DR. CRANE: The Kamikazes were especially terrifying 1684 01:22:23,689 --> 01:22:25,532 to the Americans trying to shoot them down 1685 01:22:25,607 --> 01:22:27,780 because how do you deter somebody 1686 01:22:27,860 --> 01:22:30,238 who is willing to die for something. 1687 01:22:30,320 --> 01:22:31,822 Their goal is to die. 1688 01:22:31,905 --> 01:22:36,706 And 18% of Kamikazes hit ships. 1689 01:22:36,785 --> 01:22:40,164 - NARRATOR: Four hundred-four US ships are struck. 1690 01:22:40,247 --> 01:22:42,215 When Okinawa finally falls, 1691 01:22:42,291 --> 01:22:45,044 nearly 100,000 Japanese soldiers 1692 01:22:45,127 --> 01:22:49,223 and 150,000 civilians lie dead. 1693 01:22:49,298 --> 01:22:52,393 The US suffers 76,000 casualties, 1694 01:22:52,468 --> 01:22:55,688 a third of the entire invasion force. 1695 01:22:57,598 --> 01:23:00,192 - DR. CRANE: The escalation is just horrifying here. 1696 01:23:00,267 --> 01:23:01,735 And these are little islands, 1697 01:23:01,810 --> 01:23:03,608 and now we're talking about invading 1698 01:23:03,687 --> 01:23:04,813 the whole Japanese homeland, 1699 01:23:04,897 --> 01:23:06,695 where there are millions of defenders 1700 01:23:06,773 --> 01:23:08,571 and even more millions of civilians? 1701 01:23:10,486 --> 01:23:12,363 - NARRATOR: The US War Department estimates 1702 01:23:12,446 --> 01:23:14,574 that the invasion of Japan will result 1703 01:23:14,656 --> 01:23:17,580 in 10 million Japanese casualties, 1704 01:23:17,659 --> 01:23:20,708 along with at least 1 .7 million American. 1705 01:23:22,831 --> 01:23:25,710 Another solution must be sought. 1706 01:23:25,792 --> 01:23:28,716 As the Allies celebrate victory in Europe... 1707 01:23:28,795 --> 01:23:31,719 as Hitler and his Reich go up in flames... 1708 01:23:31,798 --> 01:23:36,304 America swears in a new president. 1709 01:23:36,386 --> 01:23:38,684 And Harry Truman is destined to unleash 1710 01:23:38,764 --> 01:23:40,562 a weapon so fearsome 1711 01:23:40,641 --> 01:23:43,611 it will herald in a new dawn of warfare 1712 01:23:43,685 --> 01:23:45,653 across the globe. 1713 01:23:45,729 --> 01:23:49,233 - [bomb explodes, menacing music] 1714 01:23:55,948 --> 01:23:59,828 - NARRATOR: War has ravaged the world for nearly six years. 1715 01:23:59,910 --> 01:24:02,254 Germany and Italy are defeated. 1716 01:24:02,329 --> 01:24:06,835 Only Japan fights on in defiance of the Allies. 1717 01:24:06,917 --> 01:24:09,716 But a new weapon is about to make World War ll 1718 01:24:09,795 --> 01:24:11,672 reach its climax... 1719 01:24:14,841 --> 01:24:16,764 December 1938... 1720 01:24:16,843 --> 01:24:19,517 German scientists split the atom, 1721 01:24:19,596 --> 01:24:22,645 releasing 200 million volts of electricity. 1722 01:24:25,644 --> 01:24:29,023 After Albert Einstein warns US President Roosevelt 1723 01:24:29,106 --> 01:24:31,575 that Hitler plans an atomic program, 1724 01:24:31,650 --> 01:24:33,994 the race for the Bomb is on. 1725 01:24:35,696 --> 01:24:39,451 America, in collaboration with Britain and Canada, 1726 01:24:39,533 --> 01:24:43,128 launches the Manhattan Project. 1727 01:24:49,751 --> 01:24:52,721 Entire towns and industrial complexes 1728 01:24:52,796 --> 01:24:57,677 are constructed across the nation. 1729 01:24:57,759 --> 01:25:00,729 Employing 600,000 people 1730 01:25:00,804 --> 01:25:03,353 and costing $2 billion-- 1731 01:25:03,432 --> 01:25:06,276 $25.8 billion in today's money-- 1732 01:25:06,351 --> 01:25:09,821 it is engineering on an unprecedented scale. 1733 01:25:11,732 --> 01:25:14,235 - DR. CRANE: No other nation in the world could have done 1734 01:25:14,318 --> 01:25:16,116 the Manhattan project like the United States did. 1735 01:25:16,194 --> 01:25:18,037 You get all these theorists together, and they say 1736 01:25:18,113 --> 01:25:20,366 there are two ways in which we can build this weapon. 1737 01:25:20,449 --> 01:25:23,077 There's a plutonium bomb and a uranium bomb. 1738 01:25:23,160 --> 01:25:24,082 They're different processes. 1739 01:25:24,161 --> 01:25:24,957 They're both immensely expensive. 1740 01:25:25,037 --> 01:25:26,004 Anybody else would have said, 1741 01:25:26,079 --> 01:25:27,797 "Which one do I want to focus on?" 1742 01:25:27,873 --> 01:25:30,126 And the US said, "We're gonna make sure this works. 1743 01:25:30,208 --> 01:25:31,334 "We're going to do both." 1744 01:25:34,171 --> 01:25:35,969 - NARRATOR: July 1945... 1745 01:25:36,048 --> 01:25:38,551 the project bears fruit-- 1746 01:25:38,634 --> 01:25:41,478 a uranium bomb code-named "Little Boy" 1747 01:25:41,553 --> 01:25:45,183 and a plutonium bomb code-named "Fat Man." 1748 01:25:45,265 --> 01:25:48,769 - The atomic bomb is a technology 1749 01:25:48,852 --> 01:25:50,695 that historically is on the scale 1750 01:25:50,771 --> 01:25:53,991 of the introduction of gunpowder. 1751 01:25:54,066 --> 01:25:57,240 They've taken the kind of lethality 1752 01:25:57,319 --> 01:26:01,040 that's been honed throughout World War ll 1753 01:26:01,114 --> 01:26:04,960 and multiplied it by a whole new aura of magnitude. 1754 01:26:06,370 --> 01:26:08,418 - COL. FARRELL: For the first time, 1755 01:26:08,497 --> 01:26:09,999 with a single event, 1756 01:26:10,082 --> 01:26:12,426 an entire city could be destroyed. 1757 01:26:12,501 --> 01:26:15,345 This represented a new era in warfare. 1758 01:26:18,924 --> 01:26:19,846 - NARRATOR: Returning 1759 01:26:19,925 --> 01:26:21,046 from the Potsdam Conference, 1760 01:26:21,093 --> 01:26:23,221 US President Harry S. Truman 1761 01:26:23,303 --> 01:26:25,055 must decide whether to unleash 1762 01:26:25,138 --> 01:26:27,391 the atomic bomb on Japan. 1763 01:26:29,601 --> 01:26:31,899 - DR. CRANE: if it had come out a year later 1764 01:26:31,978 --> 01:26:33,901 that the president of the United States 1765 01:26:33,980 --> 01:26:35,823 had a weapon he could have used, 1766 01:26:35,899 --> 01:26:37,617 that might have ended the war earlier, 1767 01:26:37,693 --> 01:26:39,570 and instead he did not, 1768 01:26:39,653 --> 01:26:42,998 and we suffered 100,000 extra casualties, 1769 01:26:43,073 --> 01:26:45,576 he would have been run out of-- 1770 01:26:45,659 --> 01:26:47,707 at best, run out of town on a rail. 1771 01:26:47,786 --> 01:26:49,413 There was no way an American president, 1772 01:26:49,496 --> 01:26:51,339 responsible to his constituents, 1773 01:26:51,415 --> 01:26:54,510 could have not used this weapon. 1774 01:26:54,584 --> 01:26:57,929 - NARRATOR: Truman, hostile to Stalin and his communist ethos, 1775 01:26:58,004 --> 01:27:00,632 can see the significance of a nuclear strike 1776 01:27:00,716 --> 01:27:03,014 for the postwar world. 1777 01:27:04,010 --> 01:27:06,729 - PROF. OVERY: In 1945, America faced a real paradox. 1778 01:27:06,805 --> 01:27:08,728 For a long time, of course, Roosevelt and Truman 1779 01:27:08,807 --> 01:27:10,354 had been saying to Stalin, you know, 1780 01:27:10,434 --> 01:27:12,232 "Please help us with the war against Japan. 1781 01:27:12,310 --> 01:27:13,653 "Please invade Manchuria. 1782 01:27:13,729 --> 01:27:15,652 Please defeat the Japanese army." 1783 01:27:15,731 --> 01:27:17,699 But when it was realized that the Soviet Union 1784 01:27:17,774 --> 01:27:19,526 might defeat the Japanese and then move on 1785 01:27:19,609 --> 01:27:22,362 and occupy part of the Japanese islands, 1786 01:27:22,446 --> 01:27:24,619 that's not what the Americans wanted at all. 1787 01:27:24,698 --> 01:27:27,121 They wanted the task of rebuilding Japan. 1788 01:27:27,200 --> 01:27:29,453 And I think this was one of the most important factors 1789 01:27:29,536 --> 01:27:31,630 in influencing the American decision 1790 01:27:31,705 --> 01:27:33,173 to drop the Atomic bomb. 1791 01:27:33,248 --> 01:27:35,717 - [bomb exploding] 1792 01:27:35,792 --> 01:27:38,511 - NARRATOR: After a successful test in the New Mexico desert, 1793 01:27:38,587 --> 01:27:41,090 Truman gives the order to drop the bomb 1794 01:27:41,173 --> 01:27:42,891 as soon as possible. 1795 01:27:45,635 --> 01:27:47,808 - PROF. OVERY: A number of cities were chosen 1796 01:27:47,888 --> 01:27:49,481 as potential targets. 1797 01:27:49,556 --> 01:27:51,556 They were left untouched by the incendiary bombing, 1798 01:27:51,600 --> 01:27:54,194 because if you bombed a city, you couldn't tell 1799 01:27:54,269 --> 01:27:57,273 how much damage had been done by the atomic attacks. 1800 01:27:57,355 --> 01:28:00,359 They were also looking for one with quite a large population, 1801 01:28:00,442 --> 01:28:02,820 because if you could attack a city with a large population, 1802 01:28:02,903 --> 01:28:06,077 you, again, would be able to see the full impact. 1803 01:28:06,156 --> 01:28:08,454 When you look at it, this is a really cynical decision 1804 01:28:08,533 --> 01:28:10,206 for choosing a target 1805 01:28:10,285 --> 01:28:13,038 on which you're going to drop the most dangerous weapon 1806 01:28:13,121 --> 01:28:16,125 that has ever been developed. 1807 01:28:16,208 --> 01:28:18,836 - NARRATOR: On August 6, 1945, 1808 01:28:18,919 --> 01:28:23,095 the Enola Gay launches from the Mariana islands. 1809 01:28:23,173 --> 01:28:25,346 At 8:15 a.m. local time, 1810 01:28:25,425 --> 01:28:28,804 "Little Boy," loaded with 60 kg of Uranium, 1811 01:28:28,887 --> 01:28:31,436 is released over Hiroshima. 1812 01:28:31,515 --> 01:28:33,609 Forty-three seconds later, 1813 01:28:33,683 --> 01:28:36,311 the world changes forever. 1814 01:28:40,816 --> 01:28:43,490 The blast creates a circle of devastation 1815 01:28:43,568 --> 01:28:45,161 1 mile wide, 1816 01:28:45,237 --> 01:28:48,741 with fires over another 4½-mile radius. 1817 01:28:52,035 --> 01:28:55,335 Sixty-thousand are killed instantly, 1818 01:28:55,413 --> 01:28:57,916 with a further 100,000 dying 1819 01:28:57,999 --> 01:29:00,093 from burns and radiation. 1820 01:29:03,338 --> 01:29:04,806 Three days later, 1821 01:29:04,881 --> 01:29:07,885 "Fat Man" is exploded over Nagasaki, 1822 01:29:07,968 --> 01:29:10,892 killing 80,000 civilians. 1823 01:29:10,971 --> 01:29:12,894 - DR. CRANE: After the first bomb in Japan, 1824 01:29:12,973 --> 01:29:15,021 there was a certain amount of disbelief. 1825 01:29:15,100 --> 01:29:17,148 After Nagasaki, though, it was kind of hard to deny 1826 01:29:17,227 --> 01:29:19,696 that the Americans had some kind of new weapon here, 1827 01:29:19,771 --> 01:29:21,990 and this is just the start of what could be 1828 01:29:22,065 --> 01:29:24,944 a long pattern of destruction. 1829 01:29:25,026 --> 01:29:27,870 - NARRATOR: September 2, 1945... 1830 01:29:27,946 --> 01:29:30,199 Japan capitulates. 1831 01:29:30,282 --> 01:29:33,206 World War ll is over. 1832 01:29:33,285 --> 01:29:36,334 The nuclear age has begun. 1833 01:29:40,250 --> 01:29:42,002 - DR. CRANE: A lot of people think 1834 01:29:42,085 --> 01:29:44,304 that the moral, ethical line of destruction in World War ll 1835 01:29:44,379 --> 01:29:46,131 is crossed by the atomic bomb. 1836 01:29:46,214 --> 01:29:47,306 I disagree. 1837 01:29:47,382 --> 01:29:49,259 I think that if there's any moral lines left, 1838 01:29:49,342 --> 01:29:50,935 they're all crossed with the fire raids 1839 01:29:51,011 --> 01:29:54,436 against Japanese cities. 1840 01:29:54,514 --> 01:29:56,391 The whole question of the atomic bomb is, 1841 01:29:56,474 --> 01:30:00,399 "Will we continue to do what our weapons make possible?" 1842 01:30:00,478 --> 01:30:02,355 And that is the ultimate dilemma we've hit 1843 01:30:02,439 --> 01:30:05,488 with atomic and nuclear weapons. 1844 01:30:05,567 --> 01:30:09,538 - [poignant orchestral music] 1845 01:30:23,793 --> 01:30:25,045 - PROF. KENNEDY: if you ask 1846 01:30:25,128 --> 01:30:26,175 who won World War ll, 1847 01:30:26,254 --> 01:30:27,756 and if by that you mean, 1848 01:30:27,839 --> 01:30:28,879 what society, what nation, 1849 01:30:28,924 --> 01:30:29,846 contributed the most 1850 01:30:29,925 --> 01:30:31,097 in blood and treasure 1851 01:30:31,176 --> 01:30:32,136 to the eventual victory, 1852 01:30:32,177 --> 01:30:33,394 it's not the United States. 1853 01:30:33,470 --> 01:30:36,144 It's the Soviet Union. 1854 01:30:36,222 --> 01:30:40,352 Soviet losses in the war... over 25 million people. 1855 01:30:40,435 --> 01:30:44,406 American losses are 405,399 military dead 1856 01:30:44,481 --> 01:30:47,530 and a handful of civilians. 1857 01:30:47,609 --> 01:30:50,032 But if you ask the question who won World War ll, 1858 01:30:50,111 --> 01:30:52,330 and you mean who ended up 1859 01:30:52,405 --> 01:30:55,033 in the most advantageous position at the end of the war-- 1860 01:30:55,116 --> 01:30:56,834 reaped the greatest fruits of victory-- 1861 01:30:56,910 --> 01:30:59,629 then the answer is clearly the United States. 1862 01:30:59,704 --> 01:31:02,457 - NARRATOR: During the 6 years of war, 1863 01:31:02,540 --> 01:31:05,840 America grows from the 17th world military power 1864 01:31:05,919 --> 01:31:07,717 to number 1. 1865 01:31:07,796 --> 01:31:10,675 Her overseas bases expand from 14 1866 01:31:10,757 --> 01:31:14,182 to over 30,000 spread across the globe. 1867 01:31:14,260 --> 01:31:15,933 Her GNP doubles, 1868 01:31:16,012 --> 01:31:18,561 and she becomes the biggest creditor in the world, 1869 01:31:18,640 --> 01:31:21,689 commanding half of the planet's manufacturing capacity 1870 01:31:21,768 --> 01:31:25,739 and owning 2/3 of the world's gold stocks. 1871 01:31:25,814 --> 01:31:28,488 - DR. CRANE: it dominates the world economy. 1872 01:31:28,566 --> 01:31:31,490 It controls the formation of the UN. 1873 01:31:31,569 --> 01:31:34,163 It launches the world on a path towards globalization 1874 01:31:34,239 --> 01:31:35,661 that it wants. 1875 01:31:35,740 --> 01:31:37,834 But it can no longer go back to being isolationist. 1876 01:31:37,909 --> 01:31:40,412 The isolationist America is gone forever. 1877 01:31:40,495 --> 01:31:44,921 I'm not sure if it has actually sunk in even today 1878 01:31:45,000 --> 01:31:47,298 how much we have to be involved. 1879 01:31:47,377 --> 01:31:50,301 But as a result of World War ll, we're drawn in the world's ways. 1880 01:31:50,380 --> 01:31:54,385 We cannot escape... whether we realize it or not. 1881 01:31:54,467 --> 01:31:54,967 - ♪ 1881 01:31:55,305 --> 01:32:01,946 Support us and become VIP member to remove all ads from www.OpenSubtitles.org 146540

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