US Supplies in WWII
Essay submitted by Jill Dion
Some people say that the most devastating war in the history of the world has been
World War II. First of all, what is a war? Webster’s Dictionary says that the definition of
war is an armed contest between states or nations any contest or strife, such as a war
of words. As one can see, World War II was a contest between states or nations. It
began with a simple little conflict in Europe in 1939. This conflict involved Germany and
an Anglo-French coalition but eventually widened to include most of the nations of the
world. It ended in 1945, leaving a new world order dominated by the United States and
the USSR. As mentioned before, World War II has been the most devastating war
humans have ever been involved with. The question of why can be answered in the
three reasons listed below. First is that it involved the commitment of nations’ entire
human and economic resources. Second is the blurring of distinction between
combatant and noncombatant, and third is the expansion of the battlefield to include all
of the enemy’s territory. The involvement of nations’ entire human and economic
resources is the first and most important reason. This ties into the end of the war with
the United States and the USSR being world powers. This could have never happened if
The Essay on Cold War World Nations Nation
As we head toward the 21 st century, America will be the greatest influence to the rest of the world as being the only true superpower in the post-cold war era. It is the only country with the military, diplomatic, political and economic might to handle any type of conflict or misfortune that may arise. The misconception that because the cold war is over, America should relinquish some of its ...
the United States entire human and economic resources weren’t involved in the war
and if most of the United States resources had not went to help the USSR. The United
States at the time of the war was almost a world power. It was a strong country that
attempted to stay out of the war as long as possible but still help nations in need. The
United States did not fight the war in Europe for a few years but it began fighting it at
home. More than 60 million Americans helped the war effort by working in factories and
farms. The war production Board was created to oversee all of this production.
Chairman of the War Production Board, Donald Nelson remarked, “The American
war-production job was probably the greatest achievement of all time. It makes the
seven wonders of the ancient world look like the doodlings of a small boy on a rainy
Saturday afternoon.” No doubt about it, war production was a great achievement. Six
million women were added to the labor force. Old men who had once been retired
returned to work and the unemployed soon found jobs. Production increased. Between
1940 and the end of 1944, the production of military aircraft rose from 23,000 per
annum to 96,000. Tank production was increased from 4,000 in 1940-41 to almost
30,000 in 1943. Car plants such as the Detroit Chrysler one started to assemble jeeps
and tanks instead of the luxeray cars. All of this effort in production turned out billions
of supplies that helped win the war. Some examples are: 4,490,000 bayonets,
519,122,000 pairs of socks, 634,569 jeeps, 237,371,000 cans of insect repellent,
3,076,000,000 lbs. of beef, 7,570 railroad locomotives, 2,679,819 machine guns,
597,613 leg splints, 25,065,834,000 rounds of .30 cal. Ammunition, 1,024,000 pairs of
panties for WACs, 476,628 antitank bazookas, 1,397,000,000 lbs. of coffee, 7,309,000
500-lb. bombs, 3,242,017 hot-water bottles, 113,967 combat vehicles, 106,466,000
tent pins, and much, much more. The amount the American worker made to provide for
the war was staggering. What is even more staggering is that all of this was just for
The Essay on Epochal War State Nation States
Still riding the Trojan horse The Shield of Achilles: War, Law and the Course of History by Philip Bobbitt 960 pp, Allen Lane This is a book of extraordinary ambition. It could well have been called A General Theory of War, Peace and History. For that is what it proffers, at least for political history over the last half-millennium as perceived through European and American eyes. And it has a ...
the American army. The United States produced even more to help other countries that
include Great Britain, China, and the USSR. The United States was able to help these
countries because of the Lend-Lease Act passed by Congress in March of 1941. The
Lend-Lease Act was an act that authorized the president of transfer, lease, or lend
“any defense article” to “the government of any country whose defense the President
seems vital to the defense of the Untied States.” When the program had been
terminated in 1945, over $50 billion in Lend-Lease aid had been shipped to Great Britain,
the USSR, and China. The United States helped Great Britain a great deal but the
amount given does not compare to the aid that the USSR received. Great Britain
received 7,411 aircraft, 5,128 tanks, 4,932 antitank weapons, 4,005 machine guns, 9
torpedo boats, 4 submarines, and 14 minesweepers. Great Britain’s aid was in the
thousands but the USSR’s was in the millions. Beginning in the summer of 1941, the
United States contributed the following materials to the USSR: 2,680,000 tons of steel
170,400 tons of aluminum 29,400 tons of tin 240,000 tons of copper, 330,000
telephone sets and some one million miles of cable 2,000 radar sets 5,000 radio
receivers 900,000 tons of projectiles and explosives 3,786,000 tires 49,000 tons of
leather 18 million pairs of shoes more than six million tons of provisions three million tons
of gasoline 900,000 tons of chemical products and 700,000 trucks. Much of this was
delivered to factories for the manufacture of sheet aluminum, rubber and pipelines Most
of the aid the United States offered went to the USSR as one can see by the number
of supplies sent. World War II was one of the most devastating wars in the history of
the world yet it brought out the best in people. People helped other people. The help
came from home where millions of women worked in factories to produce aid for
Americans and others. Help also came from the battlefield where one American may
have offered a Russian a smoke to calm his nerves or the help may have come from the
The Essay on Aids in Africa 4
The new century has allowed the worlds nations to take a new outlook on the world. It has given them a chance to decide what the pressing issues are to solve, and think of ways to solve them. The UN has set the year 2000, as the year to unite the world's nations in order to make the world one. One of the issues that the world's nations are faced with is the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Africa. Even though ...
shoes a poor little Russian girl received so her feet wouldn’t freeze. Help came from all
over but most of it was from the United States in the form of supplies to help armies
win the war. At the end of the war, the U.S. is estimated to have spent $341 billion,
including $50 billion for lend-lease supplies, of which $31 billion went to Britain, $11
billion to the USSR, $5 billion to China, and $3 billion to 35 other countries. The aid
given to countries is not a waste of time nor money. If this had not taken place the
war just may not have been won. Maybe this goes along with you have to give a little
to get a little.