Allied leaders of World War II

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Image:Yalta Conference.jpg
Three of the central Allied leaders, Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Joseph Stalin (the "Big Three") at the Yalta Conference in February 1945.

The Allied Leaders of World War II consists of the important political and military figures that fought or supported the Allies during World War II. Engaged in total war, the leaders had to adapt to new types of modern warfare, on the military, psychological and economic fronts.

Contents

[edit] Image:Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Belgium

  • Leopold III of Belgium reigned as King of the Belgians from 1934 until 1951. Prior to the war Leopold had made extensive preparations against such an invasion of his country. After Belgium’s surrender Leopold stayed to face the invaders, while his entire government had fled to Great Britain. King Leopold rejected cooperation with the Nazis and refused to administer Belgium in accordance with their dictates. Despite his defiance of the Germans, the Belgian government-in-exile in London refused to recognize his right to rule. The Germans held him under house arrest at the royal castle in Brussels until the end of the war.
  • Auguste-Éduard Gilliaert was the commander of the Belgian Expeditionary Forces during the East African Campaign. The Belgian Expeditionary Forces was a unit composed of troops from Belgium and the Belgian Congo. In 1941, Gilliaert cut off the retreat of Italian General Pietro Gazzera in Ethiopia and accepted the surrender of Gazzera's 7,000 troops.

[edit] Image:Flag of Brazil.svg Brazil

  • Getúlio Vargas was the president of Brazil from 1930 util 1945. Despite Brazil's fascist government of Estado Novo and strong economic ties with Nazi Germany, Vargas eventually sided with the Allies and declared war on the Axis in 1942. Vargas gave economic and military support to the Aillies.

[edit] British Commonwealth

Image:09-2361a.jpg
King George VI, and Queen Elizabeth with Eleanor Roosevelt in London
  • King George VI was the reigning monarch of the British Commonwealth during the war. Despite only having the role of a figurehead, George VI was a symbol of national and Commonwealth unity during the war. He and his family would visit bomb sites and munitions factories. [1]. Several members of the royal family, including the future Queen Elizabeth II, served in the forces.

[edit] Image:Flag of Australia.svg Australia

  • John Curtin was Prime Minister of Australia from 1941 until 1945. In January 1942, facing Japanese attacks, he wrote in a historic New Year message that Australia looked to the US for its security, rather than the UK. Curtin also insisted that the army's I Corps return from North Africa to defend Australia. Curtin also formed a close working relationship with General MacArthur and directed the Australian military to follow MacArthur's orders as if they were his own. Curtin had frequent disagreements over defense policy with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill
  • Thomas Blamey was the commander in chief of the Australian military during the war. Commander of Allied land forces in the South West Pacific, 1942-45. He was Australia's first and only Field Marshal. In 1945 he signed the Japanese surrender document on behalf of Australia. .[2]

[edit] Image:Canadian Red Ensign 1921.svg Canada

  • Guy Simonds was an army officer who commanded the II Canadian Corps. He served as acting commander of the Cdn. 1st Army, leading the Allied forces to victory in the Battle of the Scheldt. After the war he was appointed Chief of the General Staff. He was the youngest officer in the Canadian army to be promoted to the rank of General.

[edit] Image:Newfoundland Red Ensign.png Newfoundland

  • Sir Humphrey Walwyn was governor of Newfoundland and chairman of the Commission of Government from 1936 to 1946. A former Royal Navy Admiral, during World War II he was active in encouraging Newfoundlanders to join the war effort.

[edit] Image:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand

  • Michael Joseph Savage was Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1935 till his death in 1940. An opponent of fascism and the appeasement. He decleared war on Nazi Germany in 1939 by declaring “Where Britain goes, we go! Where she stands, we stand”.
  • Peter Fraser was Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1940 till 1949. He came into office after the death of Michael Joseph Savage. During the war, Fraser had a concern with ensuring that New Zealand retained control over its own forces. After serious losses in the Balkans Campaign in 1941, Fraser determined to retain a say as to where to deploy New Zealand troops. When Japan entered the war, Fraser choose to recall New Zealand's forces to the Pacific.

[edit] Image:Flag of South Africa 1928-1994.svg Union of South Africa

[edit] Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

  • Harold Alexander was a Field Marshal commanding the 15th Army Group and all Allied ground forces in Italy. In 1940 he was the last division commander to be evacuated from Dunkirk. Alexander received the surrender of German forces in Italy on April 29 1945.

[edit] Image:Flag of Federated Malay States.png British Malaya

[edit] Image:Palestine-Mandate-Ensign-1927-1948.svg British Mandate of Palestine

[edit] Image:British Raj Red Ensign.svg British Raj

  • Mahatma Gandhi was a major political and spiritual leader of the Indian National Congress. An opponent of Nazism and Fascism, prior to the war Gandhi sent an open letter to Hitler, touting tolerance. When the war broke out Gandhi had favored offering "non-violent moral support" to the British effort. Gandhi declared that India couldn't be party to a war ostensibly being fought for democratic freedom, while that freedom was denied in India herself. As the war progressed, Gandhi increased his demands for independence.
  • Claude Auchinleck nicknamed "The Auk" was appointed Commander-in-Chief, India in January 1941 after commanding the Allied forces during the fall of Norway. He had previously in 1938, when a Major-General, chaired a committee the recommendations of which formed the basis of the 1939 Chatfield Report on the modernisation, re-equipment and expansion of the British Indian Army (which by the end of the war had grown to 2,250,000 men from 183,000 in 1939). In 1941 he replaced Archibald Wavell as Commander-in-Chief Middle East Command but returned as C-in-C India in 1943 when Wavell became Viceroy.

[edit] Image:Flag of the Republic of China.svg Republic of China

  • Chiang Kai-shek was the leader of the National Government of the Republic of China and the supreme commander of the China Theatre, which also included Burma. He was the chairman of the National Military Council, the highest political organ of the wartime Chinese government. He wished to defeat communism first before taking on Japan, but after the Xi'an Incident Chiang Kai-shek made a temporary truce with the communists to form a united front against Japan. After that war the truce ended and hostilities continued until his government retreated to Taiwan.
  • Mao Zedong was leader of the Communist Party of China. He formed an alliance with the Nationalist Government after the Xi'an Incident. After the war, the truce ended and hostilities continued until the communists gained control of the mainland.
  • Zhang Xueliang was warlord of Manchuria after the death of his father. Nicknamed the “Young Marshal”; he was a strong opponent of the Japanese occupation. He was responsible for the Xi'an incident which established a truce between the Nationalist and Communists.

[edit] Image:Flag of France.svg French Third Republic (Until 1940)

  • Albert Lebrun was the last President of the Third Republic. In 1940, he was forced to accept the German terms of surrender of France and was replaced by Philippe Pétain as head the French state (see Vichy France). In 1944, Lebrun acknowledged de Gaulle's leadership of the restored French, provisional, government. In 1945, since he had not resigned from his presidential office, and that Pétain was not president, Lebrun thought he could be able to return to power after the liberation[5].
  • Édouard Daladier was Prime Minister from 1938 to 1940. He led his country during the opening stages of the war. Daladier resigned on 9 May, 1940, the day before the German invasion of France, because of his failure to aid Finland's defence in the Winter War.
  • Paul Reynaud succeeded Daladier as Prime Minister in 1940 and led France during the Battle of France. After Germany had occupied large parts of France, Reynaud was advised by his newly appointed Minister of State Philippe Pétain to come to separate peace with Germany. Reynaud refused to do so, and resigned.
  • Maurice Gamelin commanded the French military during the critical days of May 1940, before being removed from his position after failing to defend France from the Germans.
  • Maxime Weygand replaced Gamelin as commander of the French army in May 1940. He eventually favoured an armistice with Germany.

[edit] Image:Flag of Free France 1940-1944.svg Free French Forces

Image:Casablanca-shot0033.png
Free French Generals Henri Giraud (left) and Charles de Gaulle sit down after shaking hands in presence of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill (Casablanca Conference, January 14, 1943).
  • Henri Giraud was de Gaulle's rival and Western Allies favourite. He escaped from Germany where he was Prisoner of war and co-founded the Free French movement with de Gaulle, though soon found himself relegated to second in command of the Free French Forces after the Casablanca Conference of 1943.

[edit] Image:Flag of Greece (1828-1978).svg Kingdom of Greece

  • George II of Greece was king of Greece from 1922 to 1924 and from 1935 to till his death in 1947. King George had pro-British feelings at the start of World War II. When Germany invaded Greece the King and the government fled the Greek mainland for Crete but after the Battle of Crete on the island he was evacuated to Egypt and exiled to Great Britain. During the war he remained the internationally recognized head of state, backed by the exiled government and Greek forces serving in the Middle East.
  • Ioannis Metaxas was Prime Minister of Greece from 1936 until his death in 1941. Despite his quasi-fascist tendencies and strong economic ties to Nazi Germany, he saw the expansionist goals of Mussolini as a threat to Greece. The policy of Metaxas to keep Greece out of WWII was decisively broken by the demands of Mussolini by replying "No" (Oxi).
  • Alexander Papagos was a Greek General who led the Greek Army in the Greco-Italian War and the Balkans Campaign of WWII. Prior to the war he actively tried to reorganize and reequip the Army. When war was decleared he was named Commander-in-Chief and lead Greek forces against Italy along the Albanian border. When Greek government to flee to Crete, Papagos remained behind and with other generals, was arrested and sent to concentration camps in Germany. In 1945 he was repatriated, rejoined the Army.
  • Mordechai Frizis was a Greek Colonel during the Greco-Italian War. Frizis was one of the most respected Jewish military officers in the Hellenic Army. During the war he was assigned to stop the advancing Italian Army on the Albanian border. His troops distinguished themselves in the Battle of Kalama, defending the bridge over the Kalama River. Frizis was killed in 1940 during an air attack by the Italian Air Force.

[edit] Image:Flag of Mexico (1934-1968).png Mexico

[edit] Image:Flag of Panama.svg Panama

[edit] Image:Flag of Poland.svg Second Polish Republic (Until 1939)

  • Edward Rydz-Śmigły was Marshal of Poland and commander of the Polish armed forces during the invasion of Poland. After the invasion; Śmigły-Rydz took complete responsibility for Poland's military defeat. He later resigned and joined the resistance movement as a common underground soldier.
  • Henryk Sucharski was a major in the Polish Army. At the outbreak of World War II, he was the commander of the Westerplatte position. Troops under his command defended Westerplatte for seven days against overwhelming odds. Sucharski survived the war and was posthumously promoted to the rank of General. Despite his efforts to improve the defences, he later tried to persuade his fellow officers to surrender and suffered a nervous breakdown which required his deputy to assume command.

[edit] Image:Flaga PPP.svg Polish Secret State

Image:Wladyslaw Sikorski 2.jpg
Władysław Sikorski

[edit] Image:Flag of the Soviet Union 1923.svg Soviet Union

Image:Stalin-Molotov.jpg
Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov and General Secretary Joseph Stalin.
This image is a candidate for speedy deletion. It will be deleted after seven days from the date of nomination.
  • Georgy Zhukov was a Soviet Field Marshal who led the Red Army to liberate the Soviet Union from Nazi occupation. He would lead the Soviets to overrun much of Eastern Europe, and to the capture of Berlin. After the war Zhukov was the supreme Military Commander of the Soviet Occupation Zone in Germany.

[edit] Image:Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Saudi Arabia

Image:FDR on quincy.jpg
Ibn Saud converses with U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (right) onboard the USS Quincy
  • Ibn Saud was the king of Saudi Arabia from 1932 until 1953. Ibn Saud positioned Saudi Arabia as neutral during the war until 1945. However he was generally in favor of the Allies and supplied the Allied forces with oil. [6]

[edit] Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States

[edit] European Front

[edit] Pacific Front

[edit] Image:Flag of the Philippines.svg Commonwealth of the Philippines

  • Sergio Osmena was the second Filipino president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines. As Vice President, he ascended to the presidency after Quezon's death in 1944. He returned to the Philippines the same year with General Douglas MacArthur and the liberation forces.
  • Vicente Lim commanded the Philippine Army during the early days of the war. Lim was given the rank of Brigadier General and became the top ranking Filipino under General MacArthur. He was placed in command of the 41st Philippine Division, tasked with the defense of Bataan. After the fall of the Philippines, he lead restiance against Japanese ocupation.

[edit] Image:Flag of Puerto Rico.svg Commonwealth of Puerto Rico

  • Mihiel Gilormini was a Brigadier General in the Air Force. Prior to the Attack on Pearl Harbor, Gilormini served in the Royal Air Force from 1941 till 1942. He joined the United States Army Air Force with the rank of second lieutenant. After the war he continued to serve in the Army Air Force until he was named base commander to the 198th Tactical Fighter Squadron in Puerto Rico.

[edit] Image:Flag of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (civil).svg Kingdom of Yugoslavia

  • Peter II was the last king of Yugoslavia reigin from 1934 till 1945. An opponent of Nazi Germany, he participated in a British-supported coup d'état opposing the pro-fascist Prince Paul. Peter was forced to leave the country following the Axis invasion. After the war he was deposed by the communist government.
  • Draža Mihailović lead the resistance movement Yugoslav Royal Army in the Fatherland. Following the Yugoslav defeat, Mihailović led a small group of officers and soldiers who refused to surrender, and retreated in hope of finding units still fighting. After the war, he was tried by the Communist Partisans. [8]

[edit] Image:Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg Czechoslovak Republic

[edit] Image:Flag of Luxembourg.svg Grand Duchy of Luxembourg

[edit] Image:Flag of Norway.svg Kingdom of Norway

  • Haakon VII of Norway was King of Norway and the formal head of state from 1905 to his death in 1957. Following the German invasion of Norway in 1940, Haakon refused to meet the demands of the attackers, and went into exile in London, where he stayed for the rest of the war.
  • Johan Nygaardsvold was Prime Minister during the war. His government agreed with the King not to meet the German demands, and went into exile in London. Nygaardsvold resigned shortly after the war.

[edit] Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Kingdom of the Netherlands

[edit] Image:Flag of Egypt 1922.svg Kingdom of Egypt

[edit] Image:1897 Ehiopia flag.svg Empire of Ethiopia

[edit] Image:Lionflag.svg Empire of Iran

[edit] Image:Flag of Liberia.svg Republic of Liberia

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ The History of the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth Secretariat. Retrieved on 2007-02-26.
  2. ^ John Curtin. National Archives of Australia. Retrieved on 2007-04-21.
  3. ^ http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-154332082.html
  4. ^ Caidin, ibid., dates the departure of the first AVG pilots 10 Dec 1941.
  5. ^ Albert Lebrun's biography on the French Presidency official website
  6. ^ A Country Study: Saudi Arabia. Library of Congress Call Number DS204 .S3115 1993. Chapter 5. World War II and Its Aftermath
  7. ^ Ian Bremmer, The J Curve: A New Way To Understand Why Nations Rise and Fall, Page 175
  8. ^ http://www.serb.org/serbia/memoriam-draza-mihailovich.php

[edit] See also

ro:Liderii Aliaţilor din cel de-al doilea război mondial
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