World War II: After the War
| Oct 30, 2011 | | Tweet |

At the end of World War II, huge swaths of Europe and Asia had been reduced to
ruins, borders were being redrawn, homecomings, expulsions, and burials were
under way, and the massive efforts to rebuild had just begun. When the war began
in the late 1930s, the world's population was approximately 2 billion. In less
than a decade, the war between the nations of the Axis Powers and the Allies
resulted in some 80 million deaths -- killing off about 4 percent of the whole
world. Allied forces became occupiers, taking control of Germany, Japan, and
much of the territory they had formerly ruled. Efforts were made to permanently
dismantle their war-making abilities, as factories were destroyed and former
leadership was removed or prosecuted. War Crimes trials took place in Europe and
Asia, leading to many executions and prison sentences. Millions of Germans and
Japanese were forcibly expelled from territory they formerly called home. Allied
occupation and United Nations decisions led to many long-lasting problems in the
future, including tensions that led to the creation of East and West Germany,
divergent plans on the Korean Peninsula which led to the creation of North and
South Korea -- and the Korean War in 1950, and the United Nations Partition Plan
for Palestine which paved the way for Israel to declare its independence in 1948
and begin the continuing Arab-Israeli conflict. The growing tensions between
Western powers and the Soviet Eastern Bloc developed into the Cold War, and
development and proliferation of nuclear weapons raised the very real specter of
an unimaginable World War III if common ground could not be found. World War II
was the biggest story of the 20th Century, and its aftermath continues to affect
the world profoundly more than 65 years later. (This entry is Part 20 of
a weekly 20-part
retrospective of World War II) [45
photos]
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