TODAY

This is where the Daily Chronicles are posted

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  • ICELAND CUTS TIES TO DENMARK

    Reykjavik, Iceland · May 17, 1941 On April 9, 1940, Nazi Germany invaded Den­mark and Nor­way, osten­sibly to pro­tect the neu­trality of the two Scan­di­na­vian coun­tries against Franco-Brit­ish aggres­sion. Adolf Hitler had become con­vinced in mid-Decem­ber 1939 that the two West Euro­pean Allies, at war with Ger­many for three and a half months now, were…

  • “DAMBUSTERS” BREACH RUHR DAMS

    London, England · May 16, 1943 At least since 1937, two years before the out­break of Euro­pean hosti­lities, British intel­li­gence had looked into devel­oping alter­na­tive ways to de­stroy Ger­man facto­ries in the Ruhr Valley, Ger­many’s indus­trial heart­land. Late on this date in 1943 in Germany, a Brit­ish squad­ron of nine­teen modi­fied Avro Lan­caster bombers, each…

  • DUTCH PAY PRICE, BECOME NAZI VASSALS

    The Hague, Netherlands · May 15, 1940 Following the Dutch surrender on this date in 1940, Adolf Hitler appointed fellow Aus­trian Arthur Seyss-Inquart to be Reichs­kommissar for the Occupied Nether­lands. Previously, long-time Nazi Party mem­ber Seyss-Inquart had served as Reichs­statt­halter (gover­nor) of the new Ger­man pro­vince of Ost­mark, which had once been the inde­pen­dent country of…

  • GERMANS OVERWHELM DUTCH DEFENDERS

    Rotterdam, Netherlands · May 14, 1940 On this date in 1940 in Holland, the Ger­man Luft­waffe bombed Rotter­dam’s medi­e­val city cen­ter, killing nearly 1,000 people and leaving 85,000 home­less. Rather than endure more bombings—leaf­lets dropped on Utrecht indi­cated it was next Dutch city in Ger­man cross­hairs—the Dutch army surren­dered the next day. The Ger­man offen­sive against the…

  • CHURCHILL CALLS WORLD TO ARMS VS. HITLER

    London, England · May 13, 1940 As Adolf Hitler’s armies raced across Europe, seemingly un­stop­pable, gobbling up coun­try after coun­try for Nazi Ger­many, and (God forbid) perhaps Brit­ain her­self, Winston Churchill on this date in 1940 succeeded a war-weary Neville Cham­ber­lain as prime minis­ter. After a luke­warm recep­tion from fellow Mem­bers of Parlia­ment, Chur­chill uttered…

  • HITLER FIXES DATE FOR BARBAROSSA

    Berlin, Germany · May 12, 1941 On this date in 1941, two days after Deputy Reich Fuehrer Rudolf Hess had em­barked on his his­toric “peace mis­sion” to Eng­land, Adolf Hitler finally con­firmed June 22 as the start date for Oper­a­tion Barba­rossa, the inva­sion of the Soviet Union. Among Hitler’s goals was the eradi­ca­tion of the “Jewish Bol­shevik”…

  • SOVIETS, JAPANESE CLASH AT KHALKHYN GOL

    Tokyo, Japan · May 11, 1939 Europe, the United States, and Japan, profiting from the techno­logi­cal, eco­no­mic, social, and mili­tary advan­tages con­ferred on their coun­tries by the Indus­trial Revo­lu­tion, began placing weaker nations else­where in the world under their “pro­tec­tion.” The United States did that in 1898, when the Philip­pines became an Amer­i­can terri­tory. Japan…

  • TRUMAN ADVOCATES PUNITIVE PEACE PLAN

    Washington, D.C. · May 10, 1945 On this date in 1945 President Harry S. Truman signed the Joint Chiefs of Staff Directive 1067. The person behind the direc­tive was Henry Morgen­thau, Jr., Presi­dent Franklin D. Roose­velt’s former Trea­sury Secre­tary who had long advo­cated that post­war Ger­man occu­pa­tion include mea­sures to eli­mi­nate Ger­many’s abil­ity to wage war…

  • NAZI ENCRYPTION DEVICE, CODES SEIZED

    London, England · May 9, 1941 As war loomed in Europe, British code­breakers based at Bletchley Park out­side London worked feverishly to un­ravel the Enigma cipher machine, which the Ger­mans used to en­crypt their most sec­ret commu­ni­ca­tions. The Enigma had a num­ber of differ­ently wired scrambler rotors that oper­a­tors changed and shuffled through billions of…

  • NAZIS SURRENDER IN NORWAY

    Oslo, Norway · May 8, 1945 On May 5, 1945, five days after Adolf Hitler’s sui­cide in the cata­combs beneath his Reich capi­tal, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Su­preme Commander of Allied Forces in Europe, sent a tele­gram to resis­tance leaders in Nor­way, who passed it to the Com­mander in Chief of Ger­man forces in Nor­way,…