-
Well, the battlefield of World War II is mainly in the Eurasian continent, and Canada is located in North America, I think there should be no war on the territory of Canada, plus Canada is very close to the United States, how can the United States allow the spread of war on their land.
-
Canadian troops fought in World War II. On September 1, 1939, Germany blitzed Poland, and on September 3, 1939, Britain and France declared war on Germany, and World War II officially began. Canada** declared war on the Germans on September 10, 1939.
At that time, there were only 4,500 active-duty military personnel in Canada, and there was an extreme lack of modern equipment.
But the mobilization and strength of Canada's people was also staggering, with 51,000 reservists joining the army at the end of that year alone.
During the six-year war war, Canada, with only 12 million people, sent more than a million Canadians to fight on the European front, with 37,500 Canadian soldiers killed and 55,000 wounded.
The famous Normandy landings, in which the Allies landed on five beaches, one of the most tragic battles, Juno Beach, was attacked by Canadian troops. In addition, the Netherlands was also liberated by Canadian troops.
-
Because Canada was a Commonwealth country at that time, it could not go to war without the consent of the suzerain.
-
In fact, Canada participated in World War II, but Canada is located on the North American continent, and the war did not affect the mainland. Canada was still under British jurisdiction at the time, and the British moved much of their industry to Canada. Canada also participated in the Battle of the Atlantic with Britain and the United States, countering German submarines.
And send convoys of transport ships to deliver supplies and ** to Europe and the Pacific.
-
Canada was the Allied No. 1 flight training center in World War II, and most of the bomber crew was trained in Canada.
Canada was basically at the vanguard in the European campaign and had Canadians in almost all of the hardest battles in Normandy.
Both Canada and Australia actually did well in World War II.
Australia's 9th Infantry Division withstood Tobruk as the only force to hold the Allied flank in the First Battle of El Alamein without allowing the Germans to break through.
The 2nd Canadian Infantry Division, the main participant in the Battle of Schedlt, the vanguard of the Battle of the Rhine experienced a major ** breakthrough in the German jungle defenses in the Hookwag Forest. It is not an exaggeration to say that the road into Germany was paved by Canadians with corpses.
The Battle of Schedlt was fought entirely by the Canadians, and the most important battle to open up the Rhine was basically the 1st Canadian Army against the German 15th Army, 60,000 against 90,000, without this battle, there would be no deep-water ports close to the front line, and the huge resource and supply advantages of the Allies would be greatly reduced.
Because Canada is a logistical country, not much is mentioned.
-
The sky is blue, the wilderness is vast, the wind blows the grass and sees the cattle and sheep.
To explain, Canada is a British colony, and Canada followed its old master, Britain, to participate in World War I and World War II, and picked up a lot of cheapness, which is also the reason why Canada is strong. >>>More
Depth: 150-350 meters.
Drainage: about 1000 tons. >>>More
I'll help you out.
In the 30s of the last century, Jews were mostly inhabited, such as in Warsaw, Berlin, and Kiev, and there were many settlements, and it was easy to find or isolate. In Warsaw, for example, there is the Jewish Quarter, which resembles Chinatown, but is much larger than that. In Germany, Jews have different identity cards than others, so it's easy to determine whether a person is Jewish. >>>More
The story of the Jews and the British, are you talking about the story of "A Coin"? A cloak of coins is searched, and the story is as follows: two young men, one Englishman and the other Jewish, are looking for work together. >>>More
During World War II, Germany missed at least three turnarounds. <>The most important turning point in the Battle of Britain was that the Luftwaffe underestimated the role of British radar, believing that radar was not important, and switched to bombing cities. If the Luftwaffe chose to continue to attack the British radar station at that time, and then paralyzed the radar in the English Channel area and lost the monitoring ability, this would at least drag the British Air Force and make the Air Force unable to effectively control the sea surface from the air, so that the German Sea Lion Plan could be implemented and send the German Army to the British Isles, plus the psychological impact of the blitzkrieg at that time still existed, and with the high-quality German Army at that time, in the face of the British who were limited to panic at that time, the German army should be able to take the British Isles quickly. >>>More