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For the Common Defense

Page 106

by Allan R. Millett, Peter Maslowski


  technological innovations in, 317

  theaters, 311

  transportation, 317, 325–28

  Treaty of Versailles, 338, 339, 341

  U.S. declaration of, war, 311

  World War II, 354, 359, 360, 367–403, 404–439, 440, 502, 506, 509, 511, 618

  ANVIL, 405–406, 425

  “Arsenal of Democracy” policy, 381–91

  Atlantic, Battle of, 373, 391–96

  atomic bomb, 437–39

  beginning of, 369

  blacks in, 382–84

  Britain, Battle of, 369

  Bulge, Battle of the, 433–34

  CARTWHEEL, 397

  Casablanca conference, 401

  casualties, 75n., 216, 375, 381, 384, 396, 397, 399, 411, 413, 417–21, 427, 434–38, 681

  Central Pacific/Asia 1942–1945, map of, 414

  China-Burma-India theater, 374–75, 408

  COBRA, 423–24

  command system, 380–81, 397, 411

  Coral Sea, Battle of the, 377

  D-Day, 413, 420–21

  destroyer deal, 369

  disease in, 390, 399

  draft, 370, 381–82, 426

  economic mobilization, 381–91

  German surrender, 436

  “Germany First” strategy, 371, 374, 377–78, 381, 397

  intelligence, 384–85, 390–91, 411, 418, 421

  isolation of Japan, 427–32

  Italian campaign, 401–403, 424–25, 436

  Iwo Jima, 435

  Japanese surrender, 439

  kamikazes, 419–20, 432–37

  Lend Lease, 372–73, 387

  logistical support, 373, 397, 401, 402, 405, 416, 420–27

  in Marianas, 399, 406, 417–20, 431

  MARKET-GARDEN, 425

  MATTERHORN, 408, 431

  Mediterranean theater, map of, 398

  mobilization, 369–74, 381–91, 403, 407, 426–27

  Normandy campaign, 413, 420–23

  Northern European Theater, map of, 424

  Okinawa, 436–37

  OVERLORD, 405, 406, 420

  Pacific Theaters, map of, 400

  Pearl Harbor, 373–74, 375

  in Philippines, 373–77, 399, 407–408, 415, 417–19, 434–35

  POINTBLANK, 409–415

  Potsdam conference, 439

  RAINBOW, 368–69

  Russo-German war, 372–73, 403

  Sicilian campaign, 401–403

  Siegfried Line, 425, 427, 432, 433, 435

  strategic bombing, 378, 406, 408, 409–415, 430–32

  submarines in, 371, 373, 391–96, 401, 427–30

  technological innovations, 389–91, 395, 425, 430

  Teheran conference, 367–68, 405

  TORCH, 397, 410

  Tunisian campaign, 399, 401–402

  two-front war, 396–403, 404–15, 432

  Victory Program plan, 372, 386

  Washington conference, 378–79

  Yalta conference, 438

  Worth, William J., 128, 136, 140

  Wright Brothers, 291, 299

  XB–17 bomber, 362

  XYZ affair, 89

  Yakima Indians, 128

  Yalta conference, 438

  Yamamoto, Isoroku, 366, 373–74, 377, 415

  Yamashita, Tomoyuki, 434

  Yamassee Indians, 19, 31

  Yamassee War, 19, 31

  Yeltsin, Boris, 590

  Yemen, 613, 628, 630, 637, 672, 678, 686

  York, 101

  York River, 149, 170, 171, 173

  Yorktown, 60, 69–70, 74, 75, 171

  Younger, Coleman, 161

  Young Turks, 287–88, 346

  Yugoslavia, 442, 467, 586, 616–24

  map of, 617

  Yunis al-Ahmed, Muhammad, 660

  ZAPATA, 504

  Zardari, Asif ali, 676

  Zawahiri, Ayman al-, 629, 644

  Zia ul-Haq, 587

  Zimbabwe, 575

  Zollicoffer, Felix K., 165

  Zumwalt, Elmo, 564

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Millett, Allan Reed.

  For the common defense : a military history of the United States from 1607 to 2012 /

  Allan R. Millett and Peter Maslowski.—Rev. and expanded.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  1. United States—History, Military. 2. United States—Armed Forces—

  History. I. Maslowski, Peter. II. Title.

  E181.M6986 1994

  973—dc20

  94-5199

  CIP

  ISBN 978-1-4516-2353-6

  ISBN 978-1-4391-1827-6 (eBook)

  1. A match was a length of stringlike material that had been soaked in saltpeter (or a similar substance) so that it would burn slowly and steadily.

  2. The Tuscarora Indians, an Iroquoian tribe in the Carolinas, moved northward after their defeat by the whites and were admitted to the confederacy in the early 1720s. Thereafter the Five Nations became the Six Nations.

  3. Prior to the twentieth century most campaigning occurred between May and October. A winter expedition in northern climates was rare because of the increased logistical problems.

  4. By contrast, Mexican War deaths were only 0.06 percent of the population, World War I deaths 0.12 percent, and World War II deaths 0.28 percent.

  5. The seven frigates were the United States, 44 guns; Constitution, 44; President, 44; Constellation, 38; Congress, 38; Chesapeake, 38; and Essex, 32.

  6. In 1827 the Supreme Court ruled that the president had the authority to determine when an emergency existed in which he had the constitutional right to call forth the militia.

  7. The six squadrons were the Mediterranean; the Pacific (1818); the Brazil, or South Atlantic (1826); the East India (1835); the Home (1841), which absorbed the West Indies Squadron that had been established in the early 1820s; and the African (1843).

  8. The American General Staff was quite different from the Prussian General Staff created between 1803 and 1809. The Prussian staff had the responsibility of planning for war in peacetime, which involved systematic intelligence gathering, intensive study of military history, and critiques of tactics and strategy employed in peacetime maneuvers.

  9. The term “ironclad” referred to either a wooden or iron-hulled ship protected by iron plates.

  10. The complete title was An Elementary Treatise on Advanced-Guard, Out-Post, and Detachment Service of Troops, and the Manner of Posting and Handling Them in the Presence of an Enemy. With a Historical Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Tactics, etc. etc.

  11. Not all of the men on either side were “present for duty.” For example, out of the 464,500 Confederates, only 233,500 were “present for duty.”

  12. Women successfully passed as males because uniforms were ill-fitting and loose; like many men, women attended to bodily functions in private areas instead of going to the disgusting latrines; the numerous adolescent boys in the ranks had high-pitched voices and little or no facial hair; females could readily emulate typical masculine behaviors, such as drinking, gambling, swearing, and chewing tobacco; a
nd in many cases the menstrual cycle ceased because of the intense physical activity, poor nutrition, and severe psychological stress that all soldiers endured.

  13. Though 620,000 remains the accepted figure, new research in pre- and postwar census data tentatively indicates that as many as 750,000 men may have perished during the war, an increase of 20 percent.

  14. The Air Force shifted to the “wing” instead of the “group” to identify an organization of two or more squadrons.

  15. During the war the U.S. lost a total of 3,339 fixed-wing aircraft. Of these, 2,430 were combat losses, and 909 were operational losses (primarily accidents). Although the percentages are far from precise, antiaircraft artillery and semiautomatic and automatic small arms fire were responsible for far more combat losses than SAMs or MiGs. In trying to avoid SAMs and MiGs, pilots often descended into AAA or small arms range.

  16. Fiscal year 1986 was higher in current dollars but less in inflation-adjusted dollars.

  17. Before the fighting faded away two days later, three more GIs died and thirty-four were wounded.

 

 

 


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