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Casualties in WW1

Germany 1,800,000
Soviet Union 1,700,000
France 1,385,000
Austria 1,200,000
Great Britain 947,000
Japan 800,000
Romania 750,000
Serbia 708,000
Italy 460,000
Turkey 325,000
Belgium 267,000
Greece 230,000
USA 137,000
Portugal 100,000
Canada 69,000
Bulgaria 88,000
Montenegro 50,000
TOTAL 11,016,000

Casualties in WW2

Soviet Union 25,568,000
China 11,324,000
Germany 7,060,000
Poland 6,850,000
Japan 1,806,000
Yugoslavia 1,700,000
Rumania 985,000
France 810,000
Greece 520,000
USA 495,000
Austria 480,000
Italy 410,000
Great Britain 388,000
Holland 250,000
Belgium 85,000
Finland 79,000
Canada 42,000
India 36,000
Australia 29,000
Albania 28,000
Spain 22,000
Bulgaria 21,000
New Zealand 12,000
Norway 10,000
South Africa 9,000
Luxembourg 5,000
Denmark 4,000
TOTAL 59,028,000

2006-11-18 10:17:51 · answer #1 · answered by periacs 2 · 1 0

WWI: (easy, all units wer in France) Battle deaths 53,402
WWII: nasty
►The overall Europe-Atlantic theater cost 182,070 dead. Army ground forces 141,526; United States Army Air Forces 34,505 and Navy/Coast Guard 6,039. This incluses losses at sea in the Atlantic, airbattles over all of Europe and troops lost in Africa & Italy.
The invasion of southern France's american battle casualties is slightly over 2,000 killed, captured, or missing.
Normandy losses are estimated at 1465 dead, 3184 wounded, 1928 missing and 26 captured. Of the total US figure, 2499 casualties were from the US airborne troops (238 of them being deaths). The casualties at Utah Beach were relatively light: 197, including 60 missing. However, the US 1st and 29th Divisions together suffered around 2000 casualties at Omaha Beach.
Unfortunately, the casualty lists between the normandy invasion and the Battle of the Ardennes (19,276 dead, 23,218 captured or missing, 47,493 wounded) are incomplete.

2006-11-18 12:19:15 · answer #2 · answered by Carl 3 · 0 0

countless are evoked: Tora Tora Tora, with regards to the attack on Pearl Harbor, an astounding sort of it from the eastern perspective. The Longest Day, with regards to the invasion of Normandy ( a megastar crammed solid). some later ones comprise: Saving inner maximum Ryan and needless to say a number of my favorites are previous John wayne Classics: Sand of Iwo Jima, In Harms way, Flying Leathernecks, The Seabeas (all of which comprise a love connection). the ultimate source from an outdoors perspective is the PBS documentary sequence: international conflict II.... have relaxing

2016-12-10 11:26:25 · answer #3 · answered by money 4 · 0 0

Why are you asking this question and what does it matter? We were serving our own purposes not those of France. Just because France assumed the moral high ground by refusing to send troops to a neocon war, all the intellectually-challenged, hard-hearted cockroaches have to come out of the woodwork?

2006-11-18 10:35:58 · answer #4 · answered by Babs 7 · 0 1

50,000 died in France inWorld War 1


http://europeanhistory.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ/Ya&sdn=europeanhistory&cdn=education&tm=61&gps=103_6_616_441&f=20&tt=14&bt=1&bts=1&zu=http%3A//www.info-france-usa.org/franceus/history/histo4.asp

Still looking for total for WorldWar 2

2006-11-18 10:47:29 · answer #5 · answered by Akkita 6 · 0 0

for WWII, i think it's around 22 000 in Normandy and 20 000 in the Ardennes.
interested in more detailed figures.

around 100 000 for the first world war.

2006-11-18 10:23:08 · answer #6 · answered by Ploum 7 · 0 0

Thousands died for the cowardly back-stabbing French.
They betray all their friends.

2006-11-18 10:17:16 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 5

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