Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Strategic Campaigns in World War Two
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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper briefly discusses various strategic decisions in WWII. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVstrww2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Germany: The idea grows out of the "Atlantic Charter," in which President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill called for "renunciation of expansionist aims, the right of all peoples to self-determination,
and the final destruction of Nazi tyranny (Olick 2005). These statements were general enough that the Soviet Union could go along with them, but it was worried about what "self-determination"
might mean for its territories in Eastern Europe just as Britain was worried about her Empire (Olick, 2005). In the end, the "lowest common denominator of Anglo-American and Soviet intentions
seemed to be what Franklin Roosevelt called unconditional surrender" (Olick, 2005). Germany, in other words, would not be allowed to make any conditions, but to accept total defeat. Germany first:
This refers to the critical decision made by the Allies that in the war, Germany had to be defeated before Japan: "Behind all the critical decisions of World War II
was a preponderance of judgment among those responsible for American strategy that the main effort of the United States in a war with the Axis Powers of Europe and Asia
should be made in the European theater and that Germany must be defeated first" (Morton). Obviously, this decision dictated all the others. North Africa - Operation TORCH: TORCH represents
the first combined Allied action of the war, when British and American troops landed in French North Africa (Meyer). The reasons for the invasion were partly military and partly political
(Meyer). It had no real military objective except to open the Mediterranean to shipping; politically, the Allies landed in order to "ease the pressure on the hard-pressed Soviet armies and
check the threatened advance of German power into the Middle East" (Meyer). Combined bomber offensive: In January 1943, Churchill, Roosevelt and their chiefs of staff met at Casablanca "to assess
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