All Hell Let Loose: The World at War 1939-1945. Max Hastings

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All Hell Let Loose: The World at War 1939-1945 - Max  Hastings

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#litres_trial_promo">1 Masters and Slaves

      2 Killing Jews

      21 Europe Becomes a Battlefield

      22 Japan: Defying Fate

      23 Germany Besieged

      24 The Fall of the Third Reich

      1 Budapest: In the Eye of the Storm

      2 Eisenhower’s Advance to the Elbe

      3 Berlin: The Last Battle

      25 Japan Prostrate

      26 Victors and Vanquished

      Picture Section

      Notes and References

      Bibliography

      Searchable Terms

      Acknowledgements

      Other Books by Max Hastings

       About the Publisher

      Maps

       The Pacific Theatre

       The Battle of the Coral Sea

       The Battle of Midway

       The Russians Encircle Hitler’s Sixth Army

       The 1942–43 Advance of Eighth Army

       The Russians Exploit Victory at Kursk

       Russian Advances Across Ukraine

       The 1943 Landings in Italy

       The 1944 Thrust into Poland

       The Allied Breakout from Normandy

       The 1944 Allied Advances on Germany

       The 1945 Western Drive into Germany

       The Russian Drive to the Oder

       The Final Russian Assaults

      Introduction

      This is a book chiefly about human experience. Men and women from scores of nations struggled to find words to describe what happened to them in the Second World War, which transcended anything they had ever known. Many resorted to a cliché: ‘All hell broke loose.’ Because the phrase is commonplace in eyewitness descriptions of battles, air raids, massacres and ship sinkings, later generations are tempted to shrug at its banality. Yet in an important sense the words capture the essence of what the struggle meant to hundreds of millions of people, plucked from peaceful, ordered existences to face ordeals that in many cases lasted for years, and for at least sixty millions were terminated by death. An average of 27,000 people perished each day between September 1939 and August 1945 as a consequence of the global conflict. Some survivors found that the manner in which they had conducted themselves during the struggle defined their standing in their societies for the rest of their lives, for good or ill. Successful warriors retained a lustre which enabled some to prosper in government or commerce. Conversely, at the bar of a London club thirty years after the war, a Guards veteran murmured about a prominent Conservative statesman: ‘Not a bad fellow, Smith. Such a pity he ran away in the war.’ A Dutch girl, growing up in the 1950s, found that her parents categorised each of their neighbours in accordance with how they had behaved during the German occupation of Holland.

      British and American infantrymen were appalled by their experiences in the 1944–45 north-west Europe campaign, which lasted eleven months. But Russians and Germans fought each other continuously for almost four years in far worse conditions, and with vastly heavier casualties.* Some nations which played only a marginal military role lost many more people than the Western Allies: China’s ordeal at Japanese hands between 1937 and 1945 cost at least fifteen million lives; Yugoslavia, where civil war was overlaid on Axis occupation, lost more than a million dead. Many people witnessed spectacles comparable with Renaissance painters’ conception of the inferno to which the damned were consigned: human beings torn to fragments of flesh and bone; cities blasted into rubble; ordered communities sundered into dispersed human particles. Almost everything which civilised peoples take for granted in time of peace was swept aside, above all the expectation of being protected from violence.

      It is impossible to detail within a single volume the vastness of the war, the largest event in human history. I have already described aspects of it in eight books, most significantly Bomber Command, Overlord, Armageddon, Nemesis and Finest Years. While any work such as this should be self-contained, I have striven to avoid repetition of either anecdotage or analysis of large issues. For instance, having devoted an entire chapter of Nemesis to the 1945 dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it seems fruitless to revisit my own arguments. This book sustains a chronological framework, and seeks to establish and reflect upon the ‘big picture’, the context of events: the reader should gain a broad sense of what happened to the world between 1939 and 1945. But its principal purpose is to illuminate the conflict’s significance for a host of ordinary people of many societies, both active and passive participants – though the distinction is often blurred. Was, for example, a Hamburg woman

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