North, to Germany. Answer: Germany is East of Paris. The Allies formed a front line that ran basically North/South and advanced Eastward. True, there was a thrust across Belgium to the North but that was intended to drive into Germany around the flank.
As the Allied powers (the US, Great Britain, Soviet Union and France) began to close in on Germany towards the end of the war, they began to stumble upon the concentration camps in Germany, Poland, and other nations bordering Germany. Typically, the German garrisons guarding these camps would flee before Allied forces reached them. Thus, as the Allied lines advanced, they discovered these camps, liberating those prisoners left in the camp.
The allies started by liberating countries Germany occupied early in the war. then there was a smash of Germany as the Western Allies and the Russians pour in on both sides, causing Germany to not be able to get any resources which made lots of citizens starve. Then the Russians invade Berlin causing Germany to surender.
Concentration camps :)
Holocaust, In Germany
Liberating France from Nazi-Germany's control.
There's a misunderstanding here. The Allied armies took routes required by military considerations. Liberating camps was not a key military objective.
North, to Germany. Answer: Germany is East of Paris. The Allies formed a front line that ran basically North/South and advanced Eastward. True, there was a thrust across Belgium to the North but that was intended to drive into Germany around the flank.
As the Allied powers (the US, Great Britain, Soviet Union and France) began to close in on Germany towards the end of the war, they began to stumble upon the concentration camps in Germany, Poland, and other nations bordering Germany. Typically, the German garrisons guarding these camps would flee before Allied forces reached them. Thus, as the Allied lines advanced, they discovered these camps, liberating those prisoners left in the camp.
The allies started by liberating countries Germany occupied early in the war. then there was a smash of Germany as the Western Allies and the Russians pour in on both sides, causing Germany to not be able to get any resources which made lots of citizens starve. Then the Russians invade Berlin causing Germany to surender.
Concentration camps :)
From 1940 onwards most of the very large concentration camps were in Poland or in areas annexed from Poland. they varied all in germany. Europe held a lot of the concentration camps. they lived in germany.
Dachua Concentration camp
it is not.
Germany
The U.S did nothing during the Holocaust.
Concentration camps have not ended. Germany ended theirs in 1945.