1942
Wannsee Conference plans the Holocaust
In a lakeside villa outside Berlin, fifteen senior Nazis and SS officers spent ninety minutes over coffee and cognac coordinating the Final Solution: the transport, gassing, and industrial murder of all Europe's Jews. Minutes were taken in bureaucratic language that masked the horror. Adolf Eichmann handled logistics. Death camps in Poland were already under construction.
Midway turns the Pacific war
Forewarned by codebreakers, American dive bombers caught the Japanese carrier fleet re-arming its planes at Midway and sank four fleet carriers in six minutes. Japan lost the core of its naval air arm and its chance to win the Pacific war. From that summer on, it was a long slow American push back across a very large ocean.
Japanese internment in America
Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, authorizing the military to exclude any persons from designated areas. Over the next months a hundred and twenty thousand Japanese Americans, two-thirds of them citizens, were sent to internment camps in the interior. Decades later the government would apologize. It was one of the darkest acts of the American war.
Bataan Death March
After American and Filipino forces surrendered on the Bataan peninsula, Japanese guards marched some seventy-five thousand prisoners sixty-six miles through tropical heat without food or water, bayoneting stragglers. Perhaps ten thousand died on the road. It would be a central memory of the Pacific war and, after 1945, the subject of war crime trials.
Stalingrad begins
German Sixth Army reached the Volga at Stalingrad and began fighting street by street for a city Hitler had decided must fall because it bore Stalin's name. Five months later, after the bloodiest urban battle in history, ninety thousand frozen survivors surrendered. A German field marshal had become a Soviet prisoner.