World War Two was on an (almost) global scale, and there was fighting somewhere every day. There are naval battles (like the Battle of Leyte Gulf) and there were land battles like the D-Day invasion or the Battle of Arnhem. There were battles to take significant bridges and battles to take out significant airfields. There were battles for significant towns like the Battle of Anzio, and there was the final, last-gasp effort by the Germans to push the Americans out of France called the Battle of the Bulge. There was the Battle of Britain, where hopelessly outnumbered British Spitfire and Hurricane aircraft defended the country against the entire might of the German Luftwaffe and held them off long enough to get some war materials into production. There was the Battle for Singapore, the battle for Iwo-Jima with the famous flag photo. There was a battle for a number of critical Dutch bridges that almost caused the total destruction of Holland, as written about by COrnelius Ryan in his excellent book A Bridge too Far. There was the whole North Africa Campaign where Rommel was finally defeated by British general Montgomery after many, many battles in just about every town from Casablanca to Tabruk.
Every one it fought, with the exception of the Kasserine Pass in February, 1943, in Tunisia, Africa. That was the first clash between US ground troops and the Germans. This excludes also the early defeats following the Japanese sneak attack, which would include Pearl Harbor, the Philippines and Wake Island. Once the US went over to the offensive though, other than that single instance in Tunisia, in every other engagement sooner or later the US emerged victorious.
A multitude of battles occurred during World War II. You can get an idea of just how many there were by going to Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org) and executing a search for World War II battles.
Before Alamein were barely had a victory, after Alamein we barely had a defeat.....
When? If you are referring to World War II, the whole war was a series of major battles. Two of the battles were the Battle of the Bulge and the battle for Stalingrad but there were many, many more of equal importance.
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There were several major battles in Northern Europe in World War II. Two of them were the Invasion of Normandy and the Battle of the Bulge.
Okinawa
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Google it. Not quite sure.
Pacific
there were so many battles that its hard to say exactly how many there actually were. the war was fought on an almost global scale, and many countries were involved.
16
The major battles of World War 2 were fought in North Africa, Europe and the Pacific Islands.
edlo school
their were no battles within the mainland.
They did not keep count of how many people were killed by the bazooka in World War 2. They don't have that luxury during battles to do that type of counting.
World War 1 and World War 2 were many battles between Germany and Britain.
Stalingrad and Midway.
When? If you are referring to World War II, the whole war was a series of major battles. Two of the battles were the Battle of the Bulge and the battle for Stalingrad but there were many, many more of equal importance.
all of them