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Big Three AlliesRussia (USSR, Soviets), Great Britain (UK, including British Commonwealth), and America (US).

Of course, there were more than 3 Allied Nations in WWII. France fought early on with Britain, but after it fell at the beginning of the war some French fought for the Allies and some for the Axis. Also, many British territories were vital to Allied victory, including Canada and Australia. At the Arcadia Conference in January 1942, 26 nations officially joined as the Allies.

AnswerCanada and Australia were Dominions during World war Two. They were independent nations, with their own Governments, and they set their own policies.

Canada and Australia were strong enough to form their own armies and so as far as actual fighting allies Great Britain (including the Commonwealth), Russia and United States were the three to hold fast during the second world war

The Big Three were indeed, The United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. France would have to be seen as the number four ally, because post war Germany and Hungary even were divided into four zones, Soviet Union, American, British, and French. Also the four countries who had judges at the Nuremberg trials were; you guessed it America, England, USSR, and France.

It is by ignorant, uneducated people, that the French army is seen as weak in WWII. True, they had some pretty inept commanders, and made some poor decisions, but their army was very capable. No one was prepared for the German's strength or "lightning war" (blitzkrieg) tactics.

The joke is, what is the shortest book ever written?

Answer; Italian War Heroes. It is the Italian army, not the French that was hilariously inept, always needing Hitler to save them.

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Cory Rohan

Lvl 13
3y ago

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