Dresden Bombing
Dresden, Germany, 1945. “The British Royal Air Force (RAF) and the U.S. Air Force initiated a strategic bombing campaign in Dresden, Germany” (“Dresden Bombing” par.1). The attacks from Great Britain and the United States were prompted by earlier bomb raids conducted by Germany on British soil. With orders coming in from Arthur Harris, leader of bomb command for RAF, the bombing in Dresden began February thirteenth of the year 1945. The initial bomb raid from RAF was then later followed by 771 tons of bombs being dropped by United States aircrafts (“Dresden Bombing” par. 2-3). To this day there is still controversy around this major event. Whether it should considered a war crime against innocent civilians …show more content…
On the seventh of December in the year 1941, the American naval base was attacked by Japanese fighter planes. Following the death of over two-thousand American soldiers and sailors, Franklin D. Roosevelt declared war upon Japan. After decades of conflict with Japan the United States became another country to be officially involved in World War II. One of the main reasons for tension with the country of Japan is the contrasting styles of dealing with Japan’s neighbor country China, Which was in war with Japan since 1937. At the time of Pearl Harbor, American troops were not expecting an attack from Japan, let alone so close to home (History.com Staff par. 1-3). This major attack on United States soil was a very crucial part to World War II as it initially got the U.S. involved in the midst of the conflict.During an Interview with Scholastic, witnesses Hubert Gano and his wife Margaret Ellen Gano replayed the events that transpired. “ A very loud explosion rattled our windows.” “We rushed outside to see a string of airplanes in a shallow dive toward the ships at the end of our peninsula.” “We could see red anti-aircraft tracer shells floating up toward the lead aircraft.” “I could see the "Rising-Sun" emblem that decorated the side of the aircraft which identified them as Japanese.” over two years after Pearl Harbor occurred, the United States put a stop to World War II (History.com Staff par.