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Description:
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On December 7, 1941, while German armies were freezing before Moscow,
Japan suddenly pushed the United States into the struggle by attacking
the American naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Four days later Hitler
declared war on the United States. President Roosevelt called on
Congress for immediate and massive expansion of the armed forces.
Twenty years of neglect and indifference, however, could not be
overcome in a few days.Helpless as American garrisons in the
Pacific fell to the Japanese in the spring of 1942, military leaders in
Washington worked feverishly to create a headquarters that could direct
a distant war effort and to turn the fledgling ground and air units
into viable, balanced fighting forces. In early 1942 the Joint Chiefs
of Staff emerged as a committee of the nation's military leaders to
advise the President and to coordinate strategy with the British. In
March the War Department General Staff was reorganized and the Army
divided into three major commands: the Air Forces, Ground Forces, and
Service Forces. Thirty-seven Army divisions were in some state of
training, but only one was fully trained, equipped, and deployable by
January 1942. Army planners of the time estimated that victory would
require an Army of nearly 9 million men, organized into 215 combat
divisions, estimates that proved accurate regarding overall manpower
but too ambitious for the 90 divisions that eventually were established
and supported on far-flung battlefields. |