Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
At Nuremberg, World War II’s Battle Turned to the Courtroom, and an Eloquent Lawyer Helped Lead the Allies to Victory
Robert H. Jackson, an American Supreme Court justice who thought of himself as "anything but a warrior," was drafted by FDR ...
HistoryAtWar on MSNOpinion
$1.2$ Million Casualties: The True Cost of WWII's Biggest Victory and Stalin's Vicious Betrayal
Operation Bagration officially concluded on August 28th, 1944, having inflicted over $1.2$ million casualties on both sides ...
The last of the ships that some credit with winning World War II for the Allies has plowed through the waters of the Midwest, where people got a chance to visit it.
After 1890 important changes took place within the German Empire both in domestic and foreign policy. The period was marked ...
Meet the women who were the “secret weapon” that won the war and changed the world in the process. Meet the American women who built the planes and flew them, fought on the warfront and the home front ...
Jochen Hellbeck replies to a critic.
World War II officially began on September 1, 1939, with Nazi Germany's invasion of Poland. The war would continue to rage in Europe, Africa, Asia, and Oceania for six years, coming to an end in 1945.
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