Brigadier General James Monroe Williams

Soviet soldiers killed during the Toropets–Kholm Offensive, January 1942. Officially, roughly 8.6 million Soviet soldiers died in the course of the war, including millions of POWs.
Einsatzgruppen murder Jewish civilians outside Ivanhorod, Ukraine, 1942. Over 6 million Jews were murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators in the Holocaust.
Bodies of U.S. Marines on the beach of Tarawa. The Marines secured the island after 76 hours of intense fighting. Over 1,000 American and ~4600 Japanese troops died in the fighting.

World War II was the deadliest military conflict in history. An estimated total of 70–85 million people perished, or about 3% of the 2.3 billion (est.) people that comprised the global population in 1940.[1] Deaths directly caused by the war (including military and civilian fatalities) are estimated at 50–56 million, with an additional estimated 19–28 million deaths from war-related disease and famine. Civilian deaths totaled 50–55 million. Military deaths from all causes totaled 21–25 million, including deaths in captivity of about 5 million prisoners of war. More than half of the total number of casualties are accounted for by the dead of the Republic of China and of the Soviet Union. The following tables give a detailed country-by-country count of human losses. Statistics on the number of military wounded are included whenever available.

Recent historical scholarship has shed new light on the topic of Second World War casualties. Research in Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union has caused a revision of estimates of Soviet World War II fatalities.[2] According to Russian government figures, USSR losses within postwar borders now stand at 26.6 million,[3][4] including 8 to 9 million due to famine and disease.[4][5][2] In August 2009 the Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) researchers estimated Poland's dead at between 5.6 and 5.8 million.[6] Historian Rüdiger Overmans of the Military History Research Office (Germany) published a study in 2000 that estimated the German military dead and missing at 5.3 million, including 900,000 men conscripted from outside of Germany's 1937 borders, in Austria, and in east-central Europe.[7][8] The Red Army claimed responsibility for the majority of Wehrmacht casualties during World War II.[9] The People's Republic of China puts its war dead at 20 million,[10] while the Japanese government puts its casualties due to the war at 3.1 million.[11] An estimated 7–10 million people died in the Dutch, British, French and US colonies in South and Southeast Asia, mostly from war-related famine.[12][13][14][15][16]

Classification of casualties

Compiling or estimating the numbers of deaths and wounded caused during wars and other violent conflicts is a controversial subject. Historians often put forward many different estimates of the numbers killed and wounded during World War II.[17] The authors of the Oxford Companion to World War II maintain that "casualty statistics are notoriously unreliable".[18] The table below gives data on the number of dead and military wounded for each country, along with population information to show the relative impact of losses. When scholarly sources differ on the number of deaths in a country, a range of war losses is given, in order to inform readers that the death toll is disputed. Since casualty statistics are sometimes disputed the footnotes to this article present the different estimates by official governmental sources as well as historians. Military figures include battle deaths (KIA) and personnel missing in action (MIA), as well as fatalities due to accidents, disease and deaths of prisoners of war in captivity. Civilian casualties include deaths caused by strategic bombing, Holocaust victims, German war crimes, Japanese war crimes, population transfers in the Soviet Union, Allied war crimes, and deaths due to war-related famine and disease.

The sources for the casualties of the individual countries do not use the same methods, and civilian deaths due to starvation and disease make up a large proportion of the civilian deaths in China and the Soviet Union. The losses listed here are actual deaths; hypothetical losses due to a decline in births are not included with the total dead. The distinction between military and civilian casualties caused directly by warfare and collateral damage is not always clear-cut. For states that suffered huge losses such as the Soviet Union, China, Poland, Germany, and Yugoslavia, sources can give only the total estimated population loss caused by the war and a rough estimate of the breakdown of deaths caused by military activity, crimes against humanity and war-related famine. The casualties listed here include 19 to 25 million war-related famine deaths in the USSR, China, Indonesia, Vietnam, the Philippines, and India that are often omitted from other compilations of World War II casualties.[19][20]

The footnotes give a detailed breakdown of the casualties and their sources, including data on the number of wounded where reliable sources are available.

Human losses by country

Total deaths by country

Death toll of World War II & military wounded by country
Country Total population
1/1/1939
Military
deaths from all causes
Civilian deaths due to
military activity and crimes against humanity
Civilian deaths due to
war-related famine and disease
Total
deaths
Deaths as % of
1939 population
Average Deaths as % of
1939 population
Military
wounded
Albania Albania A 1,073,000[21] 30,000[22] 30,000 2.80 2.80 NA
 Australia B 6,968,000[21] 39,700[23] 700[24] 40,400 0.58 0.58 39,803[25]
Nazi Germany Austria (Unified with Germany) C 6,653,000[21] Included with Germany Included with Germany (See table below.) S2 (See table below.) S2 Included with Germany
 Belgium D 8,387,000[21] 12,000[26] 76,000[26] 88,000 1.05 1.05 55,513[25]
Brazil Brazil E 40,289,000[21] 1,000[25] 1,000[27] 2,000 0.00 0.00 4,222[25]
 Bulgaria F 6,458,000[21] 18,500[25] 3,000[28] 21,500 0.33 0.33 21,878[25]
Burma (British colony) G 16,119,000[21] 2,600[29] 250,000[29] to 1,000,000[30] 252,600 to 1,000,000 1.57 to 6.2 3.89 NA
 Canada H 11,267,000[21] 42,000[31] 1,600[32] 43,600 0.38 0.38 53,174[25]
 China I (1937–1945) 517,568,000[21] 3,000,000[33]
to 3,750,000+[34]
7,357,000[35]
to 8,191,000[36]
5,000,000
to 10,000,000
15,000,000[37]
to 20,000,000[37]
2.90 to 3.86 3.38 1,761,335[25]
 Cuba J 4,235,000[21] 100[27] 100 0.00 0.00 NA
 Czechoslovakia (in postwar 1945–1992 borders) K 14,612,000[38] 35,000[39] to 46,000[40]
294,000[40] to
320,000[39]
340,000 to 355,000 2.33 to 2.43 2.38 8,017[25]
 Denmark L 3,795,000[21] 6,000[41] 6,000 0.16 0.16 2,000[25]
 Dutch East Indies M 69,435,000[21] 11,500[42][43] 300,000[15] 2,400,000[14]
to 4,000,000[44]
3,000,000
to 4,000,000
4.3 to 5.76 5.03 NA
Egypt Egypt MA 16,492,000[21] 1,100[45] 1,100 0.00 0.00 NA
 Estonia (within 1939 borders) N 1,134,000[21] 34,000 (in both Soviet & German armed forces)[46] 49,000[47] 83,000 7.3 7.3 NA
Ethiopia Ethiopia O 17,700,000[21] 15,000[48] 85,000 100,000[48] 0.56 0.56 NA
 Finland P 3,700,000[21] 94,700[49] 2,100[50][51] 96,800 2.62 2.62 197,000[50]
 France Q (including colonies) 41,680,000[51] 210,000[51] 390,000[51] 600,000 1.44 1.44 390,000[25]
 French Indochina R 24,664,000[21] 1,000,000
to 2,000,000[52]
1,000,000
to 2,200,000
4.05 to 8.11 6.08 NA
 Germany S 69,300,000[53] 4,440,000[54] to 5,318,000[55] 1,500,000
to 3,000,000 S1
6,900,000
to 7,400,000
(See table below.) S2 (See table below.) S2 7,300,000[25]
 Greece T 7,222,000[21] 35,100[56] 171,800[56] 300,000[57]
to 600,000[56]
507,000
to 807,000
7.02 to 11.17 9.095 47,290[25]
United States Guam TA 22,800[21] 1,000[58]
to 2,000[59]
1,000
to 2,000
4.39 to 8.77 6.58 NA
 Hungary U (figures in 1938 borders not including territories annexed in 1938–41) 9,129,000[21] 200,000[60] 264,000
to 664,000[61]
464,000
to 864,000
5.08 to 9.46 7.27 89,313[25]
Iceland Iceland V 118,900[21] 200[62] 200 0.17 0.17 NA
 India W 377,800,000[21] 87,000[63] 2,100,000[64]
to 3,000,000[65]
2,200,000
to 3,087,000
0.58 0.58 64,354[25]
 Iraq Y 3,698,000[21] 500[66] 200[67] 700 0.01 0.01 NA
 Ireland Z 2,960,000[21] 5,000 Irish volunteers' deaths included with UK Armed Forces[68] 100[69] 5,100 0.00 0.17 NA
 Italy (in postwar 1947 borders) AA 44,394,000[21] 319,200[70] to 341,000 Italian nationals and c. 20,000 Africans conscripted by Italy[71][72] 153,200[73] 492,400 to 514,000 1.11 to 1.16 1.135 225,000[25] to 320,000[74] (incomplete data)
 Japan AB 71,380,000[21] 2,100,000[75] to
2,300,000[76]
550,000[77] to
800,000[78]
2,500,000[79]
to 3,100,000[80]
3.50 to 4.34 3.92 326,000[25]
Empire of Japan Korea (Japanese colony) AC 24,326,000[21] Included with Japanese military 483,000[81]
to 533,000[82]
483,000
to 533,000
1.99 to 2.19 2.09 NA
 Latvia (within 1939 borders) AD 1,994,500[21] 30,000[83] (in both Soviet and German Armies) 220,000[84] 250,000 12.5 12.5 NA
 Lithuania (within 1939 borders) AE 2,575,000[21] 25,000[85] (in both Soviet and German Armies) 345,000[86] 370,000 14.36 14.36 NA
 Luxembourg AF 290,000[87] 2,905[87] Included with German & Allied military 4,201[87] 7,106[87] 2.45 2.45 NA
United Kingdom Malaya & Singapore AG 5,118,000[21] 100,000[88] 100,000 1.95 1.95 NA
Malta Malta (British) AH 269,000[21] Included with U.K. 1,500[89] 1,500 0.55 0.55 NA
 Mexico AI 19,320,000[21] 100[27] 100 0.00 0.00 NA
 Mongolia AJ 819,000[21] 300[90] 300 0.04 0.04 NA
United Kingdom Nauru (Australian) AK 3,400[21] 500[91] 500 14.7 14.7 NA
 Nepal AL 6,087,000[21] Included with British Indian Army NA
 Netherlands AM 8,729,000[21] 6,700[92] 187,300[92] 16,000[92] 250,000[93] 2.86 2.86 2,860[25]
 Newfoundland (British) AN 320,000[21] 1,100[94] (included with the U.K. & Canada) 100[95] 1,200 0.3 0.3 (included with the/ U.K. & Canada)
 New Zealand AO 1,629,000[21] 11,700[96] 11,700 0.72 0.72 19,314[25]
 Norway AP 2,945,000[21] 2,000[51] 8,200[97] 10,200 0.35 0.35 364[25]
Australia Papua and New Guinea (Australian) AQ 1,292,000[21] 15,000[98] 15,000 1.16 1.16 NA
 Philippines (U.S. Territory) AR 16,000,303[99] 62,500[100] 164,000[16] to 1,000,000[101][102][103] 336,000[16] 557,000 to 1,411,938[104][16][102][101][103] 3.48 to 8.82 6.15 NA
 Poland (within 1939 borders, including territories annexed by USSR) AS 34,849,000[105] 240,000[106] 5,620,000[107]
to 5,820,000[107]
5,900,000[108]
to 6,000,000[108]
16.93 to 17.22 17.075 766,606[25]
 Portuguese Timor AT 480,000[21] 40,000[109]
to 70,000[109]
40,000
to 70,000
8.33 to 14.58 11.455 NA
 Romania (in postwar 1945 borders) AU 15,970,000[51] 300,000[40] 200,000[40] 500,000[40] 3.13 3.13 332,769[110]
Belgium Ruanda-Urundi (Belgian) AV 3,800,000[111] 36,000[112] and 50,000[113] 36,000–50,000 0.09–1.3 0.695 NA
 South Africa AW 10,160,000[21] 11,900[63] 11,900 0.12 0.12 14,363[25]
South Seas Mandate (Japanese Colony) AX 127,000[114] 10,000[115] 10,000 7.87 7.87 [25]
 Soviet Union (within 1946–91 borders including annexed territories,[116]) AY 188,793,000[117][118] 8,668,000[119][120][121] to 11,400,000[122][123][124][125] 4,500,000[126] to 10,000,000[127][128][129] 8,000,000 to 9,000,000[130][131][132] 20,000,000[133] to 27,000,000[134][135][136][137][138] (See table below.) AY4 (See table below.) AY4 14,685,593[25]
 Spain AZ 25,637,000[21] Included with the German Army Included with France (See footnote.) NA
 Sweden BA 6,341,000[21] 100[139] 2,000[140] 2,100 0.03 0.03 NA
  Switzerland BB 4,210,000[21] 100[141] 100 0.00 0.00 NA
 Thailand BC 15,023,000[21] 5,600[142] 2,000[142] 7,600 0.05 0.05 NA
 Turkey BD 17,370,000[21] 200[143] 200 0.00 0.00 NA
 United Kingdom BE including Crown Colonies 47,760,000[144] 383,700[145] 67,200[146][147] 450,900 0.94 0.94 376,239[25]
 United States BF 131,028,000[21] 407,300 BF1 12,100 BF2 419,400 0.32 0.32 671,801[25]
 Yugoslavia BG 15,490,000[148] 300,000[149]
to 446,000[150]
581,000[150] to 1,400,000[149] 1,027,000[150] to 1,700,000[149] 6.63 to 10.97 8.8 425,000[25]
Other states and territories BH 300,000,000 NA
Approx. totals 2,300,000,000[151] 21,000,000
to 25,500,000
29,000,000
to 30,500,000
19,000,000
to 28,000,000
70,000,000
to 85,000,000
3.0 to 3.7 3.35 NA
  • Figures are rounded to the nearest hundredth place.
  • Military casualties include deaths of regular military forces from combat as well as non-combat causes. Partisan and resistance fighter deaths are included with military losses. The deaths of prisoners of war in captivity and personnel missing in action are also included with military deaths. Whenever possible the details are given in the footnotes.
  • The armed forces of the various states are treated as single entities, for example the deaths of Austrians, French and foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe in the Wehrmacht are included with German military losses. For example, Michael Strank is included in the American, not Czechoslovak, war dead total.
  • Civilian war dead are included with the territories where they resided. For example, German Jewish refugees in France who were deported to the death camps are included with French casualties in the published sources on the Holocaust.
  • The official casualty statistics published by the governments of the United States, France, and the United Kingdom do not give the details of the national origin, ethnic background, and religion of the losses.
  • Civilian casualties include deaths caused by strategic bombing, Holocaust victims, German war crimes, Japanese war crimes, population transfers in the Soviet Union, Allied war crimes, and deaths due to war related famine and disease. The exact breakdown is not always provided in the sources cited.

Nazi Germany

Human losses of the Third Reich in World War II (included in above figures of total war dead). A detailed description is given in the footnotes for Germany and Austria.[8][9]^S2
Country Population
1939
Military
deaths
Civilian deaths due to
Allied Strategic Bombing
Civilian deaths due to
Nazi persecution
Civilian deaths due to Expulsion of Germans Total
deaths
Deaths as
% of 1939
population
Austria 6,653,000[21] 250,000[152] to 261,000[55] 24,000[152][153] 100,000[153] 370,000[154] 5.56
Germany (within 1937 borders)[155] 69,300,000[53] 3,760,000[152] to 4,456,000[55] 353,000 (1942 borders)[156] to 410,000[152][157] 300,000[158] to 500,000[159][160] 400,000[161] to 1,225,000[152] 5,700,000[162] 8.23
Foreign nationals of German ancestry in Eastern Europe[163] 7,423,000[164] 430,000[54] to 538,000[55] 200,000[165] to 886,000[166] 738,000[55][165] to 1,316,000[167] 9.96 to 17.76
Foreign nationals in Western Europe 215,000[168] 63,000[55] 63,000[55] 29.3
Approx. Totals 83,500,000 4,440,000[54] to 5,318,000[55] 353,000[156] to 434,000[54] 400,000[169][159] to 600,000[159][160][169] 600,000[170] to 2,111,000[167] 6,900,000 to 7,400,000 8.26 to 8.86
  • German sources do not provide figures for Soviet citizens conscripted by Germany. Russian historian Grigoriy Krivosheyev puts the losses of the "Vlasovites, Balts and Muslims etc." in German service at 215,000.[171]

Soviet Union

The estimated breakdown for each Soviet republic of total war dead[10]^AY4

Soviet Republic Population 1940
(within 1946–91 borders)
Military deaths Civilian deaths due to
military activity and
crimes against humanity
Civilian deaths due to war
related famine and disease
Total Deaths as % of
1940 population
 Armenia 1,320,000 150,000 30,000 180,000 13.6%
 Azerbaijan 3,270,000 210,000 90,000 300,000 9.1%
 Belarus 9,050,000 620,000 1,360,000 310,000 2,290,000 25.3%
 Estonia 1,050,000 30,000 50,000 80,000 7.6%
 Georgia 3,610,000 190,000 110,000 300,000 8.3%
 Kazakhstan 6,150,000 310,000 350,000 660,000 10.7%
 Kyrgyzstan 1,530,000 70,000 50,000 120,000 7.8%
 Latvia 1,890,000 30,000 190,000 40,000 260,000 13.7%
 Lithuania 2,930,000 25,000 275,000 75,000 375,000 12.7%
 Moldova 2,470,000 50,000 75,000 45,000 170,000 6.9%
 Russia 110,100,000 6,750,000 4,100,000 3,100,000 13,950,000 12.7%
 Tajikistan 1,530,000 50,000 70,000 120,000 7.8%
 Turkmenistan 1,300,000 70,000 30,000 100,000 7.7%
 Ukraine 41,340,000 1,650,000 3,700,000 1,500,000 6,850,000 16.3%
 Uzbekistan 6,550,000 330,000 220,000 550,000 8.4%
Unidentified 165,000 130,000 295,000
Total USSR 194,090,000 10,600,000 10,000,000 6,000,000 26,600,000 13.7%

The source of the figures is Vadim Erlikman [ru].[172] Erlikman, a Russian historian, notes that these figures are his estimates.

Holocaust deaths

Included in the figures of total war dead for each country are victims of the Holocaust.

Jewish deaths

The Holocaust is the term generally used to describe the genocide of approximately six million European Jews during World War II. Martin Gilbert estimates 5.7 million (78%) of the 7.3 million Jews in German-occupied Europe were Holocaust victims.[182] Estimates of Holocaust deaths range between 4.9 and 5.9 million Jews.[183]

Statistical breakdown of Jewish dead

The figures for the pre-war Jewish population and deaths in the table below are from The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust.[183] The low, high and average percentage figures for deaths of the pre-war population have been added.

Country Pre-war Jewish population[183] in 1933 Low estimate deaths[183] High estimate deaths[183] Low % High % Average %
Austria Austria 191,000 (see footnote) 50,000 65,000 26.2% 34.0% 30.1%
Belgium Belgium 60,000 (see footnote) 25,000 29,000 41.7% 48.3% 45.0%
Czech Republic Czech Republic[188] 92,000 77,000 78,300 83.7% 85.1% 84.4%
Denmark Denmark 8,000 60 116 0.8% 1.5% 1.1%
Estonia Estonia 4,600 1,500 2,000 32.6% 43.5% 38.0%
France France 260,000 (see footnote) 75,000 77,000 28.8% 29.6% 29.2%
Germany Germany 566,000 (see footnote) 135,000 142,000 23.9% 25.1% 24.5%
Greece Greece 73,000 59,000 67,000 80.8% 91.8% 86.3%
Hungary Hungary (borders 1940)[189] 725,000 502,000 569,000 69.2% 78.5% 73.9%
Italy Italy 48,000 6,500 9,000 13.5% 18.8% 16.1%
Latvia Latvia 95,000 70,000 72,000 73.7% 75.8% 74.7%
Lithuania Lithuania 155,000 130,000 143,000 83.9% 92.3% 88.1%
Luxembourg Luxembourg 3,500 1,000 2,000 28.6% 57.1% 42.9%
Netherlands Netherlands 140,000 (see footnote) 100,000 105,000 72.8% 74.3% 71.0%
Norway Norway 1,700 800 800 47.1% 47.1% 47.1%
Poland Poland (borders 1939) 3,250,000 2,700,000 3,000,000 83.1% 92.3% 87.7%
Romania Romania (borders 1940) 441,000 121,000 287,000 27.4% 65.1% 46.3%
Slovakia Slovakia 89,000 60,000 71,000 67.4% 79.8% 73.6%
Soviet Union Soviet Union (borders 1939) 2,825,000 700,000 1,100,000 24.8% 38.9% 31.9%
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia 68,000 56,000 65,000 82.4% 95.6% 89.0%
Total 9,067,000 4,869,860 5,894,716 50.4% (avg.) 59.7% (avg.) 55.1% (avg.)
  • The total population figures from 1933 listed here are taken from The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust. From 1933 to 1939 about 400,000 Jews fled Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia. Some of these refugees were in western Europe when Germany occupied these countries in 1940. In 1940 there were 30,000 Jewish refugees in the Netherlands, 12,000 in Belgium, 30,000 in France, 2,000 in Denmark, 5,000 in Italy, and 2,000 in Norway.[190]
  • Hungarian Jewish losses of 569,000 presented here include the territories annexed in 1939–41.[191] The number of Holocaust dead in 1938 Hungarian borders were 220,000.[61] According to Martin Gilbert, the Jewish population inside Hungary's 1941 borders was 764,000 (445,000 in the 1938 borders and 319,000 in the annexed territories). Holocaust deaths from inside the 1938 borders was 200,000, not including 20,000 men conscripted as forced labor for the military.[192]
  • Netherlands figure listed in the table of 112,000 Jews taken from The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust includes those Jews who were resident in Holland in 1933. By 1940, the Jewish population had increased to 140,000 with the inclusion of 30,000 Jewish refugees.[190] In the Netherlands, 8,000 Jews in mixed marriages were not subject to deportation.[193] However, an article in the Dutch periodical De Groene Amsterdammer maintains that some Jews in mixed marriages were deported before the practice was ended by Hitler.[194]
  • Hungarian Jewish Holocaust victims within the 1939 borders were 200,000.[195]
  • Romanian Jewish Holocaust victims totalled 469,000 within the 1939 borders, which includes 300,000 in Bessarabia and Bukovina occupied by the USSR in 1940.[195][196]
  • According to Martin Gilbert, Jewish Holocaust victims totaled 8,000 in Italy, and 562 in the Italian colony of Libya.[197]

Non-Jews persecuted and killed by Nazi and Nazi-affiliated forces

Some scholars maintain that the definition of the Holocaust should also include the other victims persecuted and killed by the Nazis.[198][199]

  • Donald L. Niewyk, professor of history at Southern Methodist University, maintains that the Holocaust can be defined in four ways: first, that it was the genocide of the Jews alone; second, that there were several parallel Holocausts, one for each of the several groups; third, the Holocaust would include Roma and the handicapped along with the Jews; fourth, it would include all racially motivated German crimes, such as the murder of Soviet prisoners of war, Polish and Soviet civilians, as well as political prisoners, religious dissenters, and homosexuals. Using this definition, the total number of Holocaust victims is between 11 million and 17 million people.[200]
  • According to the College of Education of the University of South Florida "Approximately 11 million people were killed because of Nazi genocidal policy".[201]
  • R.J. Rummel estimated the death toll due to Nazi Democide at 20.9 million persons.[202]
  • Timothy Snyder put the number of victims of the Nazis killed as a result of "deliberate policies of mass murder" only, such as executions, deliberate famine and in death camps, at 10.4 million persons including 5.4 million Jews.[203]
  • German scholar Hellmuth Auerbach puts the death toll in the Hitler era at 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust and 7 million other victims of the Nazis.[204]
  • Dieter Pohl puts the total number of victims of the Nazi era at between 12 and 14 million persons, including 5.6–5.7 million Jews.[205]
  • Roma Included in the figures of total war dead are the Roma victims of the Nazi persecution; some scholars include the Roma deaths with the Holocaust. Most estimates of Roma (Gypsies) victims range from 130,000 to 500,000.[200][206] Ian Hancock, Director of the Program of Romani Studies and the Romani Archives and Documentation Center at the University of Texas at Austin, has argued in favour of a higher figure of between 500,000 and 1,500,000 Roma dead.[207] Hancock writes that, proportionately, the death toll equaled "and almost certainly exceed[ed], that of Jewish victims".[208] In a 2010 publication, Ian Hancock stated that he agrees with the view that the number of Romanis killed has been underestimated as a result of being grouped with others in Nazi records under headings such as "remainder to be liquidated", "hangers-on" and "partisans".[209]
  • In 2018, the United States Holocaust museum has the number of murdered during the time period of the holocaust at 17 million – 6 million Jews and 11 million others.[210]

The following figures are from The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, the authors maintain that "statistics on Gypsy losses are especially unreliable and controversial. These figures (cited below) are based on necessarily rough estimates".[211]

Country Pre-war Roma population Low estimate victims High estimate victims
Austria 11,200 6,800 8,250
Belgium 600 350 500
Czech Republic[188] 13,000 5,000 6,500
Estonia 1,000 500 1,000
France 40,000 15,150 15,150
Germany 20,000 15,000 15,000
Greece ? 50 50
Hungary 100,000 1,000 28,000
Italy 25,000 1,000 1,000
Latvia 5,000 1,500 2,500
Lithuania 1,000 500 1,000
Luxembourg 200 100 200
Netherlands 500 215 500
Poland 50,000 8,000 35,000
Romania 300,000 19,000 36,000
Slovakia 80,000 400 10,000
Soviet Union (borders 1939) 200,000 30,000 35,000
Yugoslavia 100,000 26,000 90,000
Total 947,500 130,565 285,650
  • Handicapped persons: 200,000 to 250,000 handicapped persons were killed.[212] A 2003 report by the German Federal Archive put the total murdered during the Action T4 and Action 14f13 programs at 200,000.[213][214]
  • Prisoners of War: POW deaths in Nazi captivity totalled 3.1 million[215] including 2.6 to 3.0 million Soviet prisoners of war.[216]
  • Ethnic Poles: According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum "It is estimated that the Germans killed at least 1.9 million non-Jewish Polish civilians during World War II."[217] They maintain that "Documentation remains fragmentary, but today scholars of independent Poland believe that 1.8 to 1.9 million Polish civilians (non-Jews) were victims of German Occupation policies and the war."[218] However, the Polish government affiliated Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) in 2009 estimated 2,770,000 ethnic Polish deaths due to the German occupation[219] (see World War II casualties of Poland).
  • Russians, Ukrainians and Belarusians: According to Nazi ideology, Slavs were useless sub-humans. As such, their leaders, the Soviet elite, were to be killed and the remainder of the population enslaved, starved to death, or expelled further eastward. As a result, millions of civilians in the Soviet Union were deliberately killed, starved, or worked to death.[220] Contemporary Russian sources use the terms "genocide" and "premeditated extermination" when referring to civilian losses in the occupied USSR.[citation needed] Civilians killed in reprisals during the Soviet partisan war and wartime-related famine account for a major part of the huge toll.[221] The Cambridge History of Russia puts overall civilian deaths in the Nazi-occupied USSR at 13.7 million persons including 2 million Jews. There were an additional 2.6 million deaths in the interior regions of the Soviet Union. The authors maintain "scope for error in this number is very wide". At least 1 million perished in the wartime GULAG camps or in deportations. Other deaths occurred in the wartime evacuations and due to war related malnutrition and disease in the interior. The authors maintain that both Stalin and Hitler "were both responsible but in different ways for these deaths", and "In short the general picture of Soviet wartime losses suggests a jigsaw puzzle. The general outline is clear: people died in colossal numbers but in many different miserable and terrible circumstances. But individual pieces of the puzzle do not fit well; some overlap and others are yet to be found".[222] Bohdan Wytwycky maintained that civilian losses of 3.0 million Ukrainians and 1.4 million Belarusians "were racially motivated".[223][224] According to Paul Robert Magocsi, between 1941 and 1945, approximately 3,000,000 Ukrainian and other non-Jewish victims were killed as part of Nazi extermination policies in the territory of modern Ukraine.[225] Dieter Pohl puts the total number of victims of the Nazi policies in the USSR at 500,000 civilians killed in the repression of partisans, 1.0 million victims of the Nazi Hunger Plan, c. 3.0 million Soviet POW and 1.0 million Jews (in pre-war borders).[226] Soviet author Georgiy A. Kumanev put the civilian death toll in the Nazi-occupied USSR at 8.2 million (4.0 million Ukrainians, 2.5 million Belarusians, and 1.7 million Russians).[227] A report published by the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1995 put the death toll due to the German occupation at 13.7 million civilians (including Jews): 7.4 million victims of Nazi genocide and reprisals; 2.2 million persons deported to Germany for forced labor; and 4.1 million famine and disease deaths in occupied territory. Sources published in the Soviet Union were cited to support these figures.[228]
  • Homosexuals: According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum "Between 1933 and 1945 the police arrested an estimated 100,000 men as homosexuals. Most of the 50,000 men sentenced by the courts spent time in regular prisons, and between 5,000 and 15,000 were interned in concentration camps." They also noted that there are no known statistics for the number of homosexuals who died in the camps.[229]
  • Other victims of Nazi persecution: Between 1,000 and 2,000 Roman Catholic clergy,[230] about 1,000 Jehovah's Witnesses,[231] and an unknown number of Freemasons[232] perished in Nazi prisons and camps. "The fate of black people from 1933 to 1945 in Nazi Germany and in German-occupied territories ranged from isolation to persecution, sterilization, medical experimentation, incarceration, brutality, and murder."[233] During the Nazi era Communists, Socialists, Social Democrats, and trade union leaders were victims of Nazi persecution.[234]
  • Serbs: The numbers of Serbs murdered by the Ustaše is the subject of debate and estimates vary widely. Yad Vashem estimates over 500,000 murdered, 250,000 expelled and 200,000 forcibly converted to Catholicism.[235] The estimate of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum is that the Ustaše murdered between 320,000 and 340,000 ethnic Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia between 1941 and 1945, with roughly 45,000 to 52,000 murdered at the Jasenovac concentration camp alone.[236] According to the Wiesenthal Center at least 90,000 Serbs, Jews, Gypsies and anti-fascist Croatians perished at the hands of the Ustashe at the camp at Jasenovac.[237] According to Yugoslav sources published in the Tito era the estimates of the number of Serb victims range from 200,000 to at least 600,000 persons.[238] See also World War II persecution of Serbs.

German war crimes

During World War II, the German military helped fulfill Nazism's racial, political, and territorial ambitions. Long after the war, a myth persisted claiming the German military (or Wehrmacht) was not involved in the Holocaust and other crimes associated with Nazi genocidal policy. This belief is untrue. The German military participated in many aspects of the Holocaust: in supporting Hitler, in the use of forced labor, and in the mass murder of Jews and other groups targeted by the Nazis.

The military's complicity extended not only to the generals and upper leadership but also to the rank and file. In addition, the war and genocidal policy were inextricably linked. The German army (or Heer) was the most complicit as a result of being on the ground in Germany's eastern campaigns, but all branches participated.

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum[239]

Soviet POWs held by the Nazis in Mauthausen concentration camp. It is estimated that at least 3.3 million Soviet POWs died in German custody.[240]

Nazi Germany ordered, organized and condoned a substantial number of war crimes in World War II. The most notable of these is the Holocaust in which millions of Jews, Poles, and Romani were systematically murdered or died from abuse and mistreatment. Millions also died as a result of other German actions.

While the Nazi Party's own SS forces (in particular the SS-Totenkopfverbände, Einsatzgruppen and Waffen-SS) of Nazi Germany was the organization most responsible for the genocidal killing of the Holocaust, the regular armed forces represented by the Wehrmacht committed war crimes of their own, particularly on the Eastern Front in the war against the Soviet Union.

Japanese war crimes

Included with total war dead are victims of Japanese war crimes.

R. J. Rummel

R. J. Rummel estimates the civilian victims of Japanese democide at 5,964,000. Detailed by country:

  • China: 3,695,000
  • Indochina: 457,000
  • Korea: 378,000
  • Indonesia: 375,000
  • Malaya-Singapore: 283,000
  • Philippines: 119,000
  • Burma: 60,000
  • Pacific Islands: 57,000

Rummel estimates POW deaths in Japanese custody at 539,000. Detailed by country:

  • China: 400,000
  • French Indochina: 30,000
  • Philippines: 27,300
  • Netherlands: 25,000
  • France: 14,000
  • Britain: 13,000
  • British Colonies: 11,000
  • U.S.: 10,700
  • Australia: 8,000[20][241]

Werner Gruhl

Werner Gruhl estimates the civilian deaths at 20,365,000.

Detailed by country
  • China: 12,392,000
  • Indochina: 1,500,000
  • Korea: 500,000
  • Dutch East Indies: 3,000,000
  • Malaya and Singapore: 100,000
  • Philippines: 500,000
  • Burma: 170,000
  • Forced laborers in Southeast Asia: 70,000, 30,000 interned non-Asian civilians
  • Timor: 60,000
  • Thailand and Pacific Islands: 60,000.[242][243]

Gruhl estimates POW deaths in Japanese captivity at 331,584.

Detailed by country
  • China: 270,000
  • Netherlands: 8,500
  • Britain: 12,433
  • Canada: 273
  • Philippines: 20,000
  • Australia: 7,412
  • New Zealand: 31
  • United States: 12,935[242]

Out of 60,000 Indian Army POWs taken at the Fall of Singapore, 11,000 died in captivity.[244] There were 14,657 deaths among the total 130,895 western civilians interned by the Japanese due to famine and disease.[245][246]

Oppression in the Soviet Union

Polish military officers executed by the Soviet NKVD in the Katyn massacre, exhumation photo taken by the Polish Red Cross delegation in 1943

The total war dead in the USSR includes about 1 million[247] victims of Stalin's regime. The number of deaths in the Gulag labor camps increased as a result of wartime overcrowding and food shortages.[248] The Stalin regime deported the entire populations of ethnic minorities considered to be potentially disloyal.[249] Since 1990 Russian scholars have been given access to the Soviet-era archives and have published data on the numbers of people executed and those who died in Gulag labor camps and prisons.[250] The Russian scholar Viktor Zemskov puts the death toll from 1941 to 1945 at about 1 million based on data from the Soviet archives.[247] The Soviet-era archive figures on the Gulag labor camps has been the subject of a vigorous academic debate outside Russia since their publication in 1991. J. Arch Getty and Stephen G. Wheatcroft maintain that Soviet-era figures more accurately detail the victims of the Gulag labor camp system in the Stalin era.[251][252] Robert Conquest and Steven Rosefielde have disputed the accuracy of the data from the Soviet archives, maintaining that the demographic data and testimonials by survivors of the Gulag labor camps indicate a higher death toll.[253][254] Rosefielde posits that the release of the Soviet Archive figures is disinformation generated by the modern KGB.[255] Rosefielde maintains that the data from the Soviet archives is incomplete; for example, he pointed out that the figures do not include the 22,000 victims of the Katyn massacre.[256] Rosefielde's demographic analysis puts the number of excess deaths due to Soviet repression at 2,183,000 in 1939–40 and 5,458,000 from 1941 to 1945.[257] Michael Haynes and Rumy Husun accept the figures from the Soviet archives as being an accurate tally of Stalin's victims, they maintain that the demographic data depicts an underdeveloped Soviet economy and the losses in World War Two rather than indicating a higher death toll in the Gulag labor camps.[258]

In August 2009 the Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) researchers estimated 150,000 Polish citizens were killed due to Soviet repression. Since the collapse of the USSR, Polish scholars have been able to do research in the Soviet archives on Polish losses during the Soviet occupation.[181] Andrzej Paczkowski puts the number of Polish deaths at 90,000–100,000 of the 1.0 million persons deported and 30,000 executed by the Soviets.[259] In 2005 Tadeusz Piotrowski estimated the death toll in Soviet hands at 350,000.[260]

The Estonian State Commission for the Examination of Repressive Policies Carried out During the Occupations put civilian deaths due to the Soviet occupation in 1940–1941 at 33,900 including (7,800 deaths) of arrested people, (6,000) deportee deaths, (5,000) evacuee deaths, (1,100) people gone missing and (14,000) conscripted for forced labor. After the reoccupation by the USSR, 5,000 Estonians died in Soviet prisons during 1944–45.[261]

The following is a summary of the data from the Soviet archives:
Reported deaths for the years 1939–1945 1,187,783, including: judicial executions 46,350; deaths in Gulag labor camps 718,804; deaths in labor colonies and prisons 422,629.[262]

Deported to special settlements: (figures are for deportations to Special Settlements only, not including those executed, sent to Gulag labor camps or conscripted into the Soviet Army. Nor do the figures include additional deportations after the war).
Deported from annexed territories 1940–41 380,000 to 390,000 persons, including: Poland 309–312,000; Lithuania 17,500; Latvia 17,000; Estonia 6,000; Moldova 22,842.[263] In August 1941, 243,106 Poles living in the Special Settlements were amnestied and released by the Soviets.[264]
Deported during the War 1941–1945 about 2.3 million persons of Soviet ethnic minorities including: Soviet Germans 1,209,000; Finns 9,000; Karachays 69,000; Kalmyks 92,000; Chechens and Ingush 479,000; Balkars 37,000; Crimean Tatars 191,014; Meskhetian Turks 91,000; Greeks, Bulgarians and Armenians from Crimea 42,000; Ukrainian OUN members 100,000; Poles 30,000.[265]
A total of 2,230,500[266] persons were living in the settlements in October 1945 and 309,100 deaths were reported in special settlements for the years 1941–1948.[267]

Russian sources list Axis prisoner of war deaths of 580,589 in Soviet captivity based on data in the Soviet archives (Germany 381,067; Hungary 54,755; Romania 54,612; Italy 27,683; Finland 403, and Japan 62,069).[268] However, some western scholars estimate the total at between 1.7 and 2.3 million.[269]

Military casualties by branch of service

Country Branch of service Number served Killed/missing Wounded Prisoners of war Captured Percent killed
Germany Army[270] 13,600,000 4,202,000 30.9
Germany Air Force (including infantry units)[270] 2,500,000 433,000 17.3
Germany Navy[270] 1,200,000 138,000 11.5
Germany Waffen SS[270] 900,000 314,000 34.9
Germany Volkssturm and other Paramilitary Forces[270] 231,000
Germany Total (incl. conscripted foreigners) 18,200,000 5,318,000 6,035,000 11,100,000 29.2
Japan[271][272] Army (1937–1945) 6,300,000 1,326,076 85,600 30,000 24.2
Japan Navy (1941–1945) 2,100,000 414,879 8,900 10,000 19.8
Japan POW dead after surrender[273][274][275] 381,000
Japan Imperial Japan Total 8,400,000 2,121,955 94,500 40,000 25.3
Italy Army 3,040,000 246,432 8.1
Italy Navy 259,082[276] 31,347 12.0
Italy Air Force 130,000[277] 13,210 10.2
Italy Partisan forces 80,000[278] to 250,000[279][280] 35,828 14 to 44
Italy RSI forces 520,000[281] 13,021 to 35,000 2.5 to 6.7
Italy Total Italian Forces 3,430,000[282][283] 319,207[284] to 341,000 320,000 1,300,000[285] 9.3 to 9.9
Soviet Union (1939–40) All branches of service[286] 136,945 205,924
Soviet Union (1941–45) All branches of service[287] 34,476,700 8,668,400 14,685,593 4,050,000 25.1
Soviet Union Conscripted Reservists not yet in active service (see note below)[288] 500,000
Soviet Union Civilians in POW camps (see note below)[289] 1,000,000 1,750,000
Soviet Union Paramilitary and Soviet partisan units[290] 400,000
Soviet Union Total Soviet Forces 34,476,700 10,725,345 14,915,517 5,750,000 31.1
British Empire and Commonwealth[63][291][292] All branches of service 17,843,000 580,497 475,000 318,000 3.3
United States[293] Army[294] 11,260,000 318,274 565,861 124,079[294][295] 2.8
United States Air Force (included with Army)[294] (3,400,000) (88,119) (17,360) 2.5
United States Navy 4,183,446 62,614 37,778 3,848[295] 1.5
United States Maritime Service 215,000 9,400 12,000 663[296] 4.5
United States Marine Corps 669,100 24,511 68,207 2,274[297][295] 3.7
United States Coast Guard[298] 241,093 1,917 0.8
United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps[299] 2,600 8[300] 0.3
United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Corps[301] 3
United States Total U.S. Armed Forces 16,353,639 407,316 671,846 130,201[302][303] 2.5
Germany
  1. The number killed in action was 2,303,320; died of wounds, disease or accidents 500,165; 11,000 sentenced to death by court martial; 2,007,571 missing in action or unaccounted for after the war; 25,000 suicides; 12,000 unknown;[304] 459,475 confirmed POW deaths, of whom 77,000 were in the custody of the U.S., UK and France; and 363,000 in Soviet custody. POW deaths includes 266,000 in the post-war period after June 1945, primarily in Soviet captivity.[305]
  2. Rüdiger Overmans writes "It seems entirely plausible, while not provable, that one half of the 1.5 million missing on the eastern front were killed in action, the other half (700,000) having died in Soviet custody".[306]
  3. Soviet sources list the deaths of 474,967 of the 2,652,672 German Armed Forces POW taken in the war.[307]
USSR
  1. Estimated total Soviet military war dead in 1941–45 on the Eastern Front (World War II) including missing in action, POWs and Soviet partisans range from 8.6 to 10.6 million.[290] There were an additional 127,000 war dead in 1939–40 during the Winter War with Finland.[308]
  2. The official figures for military war dead and missing in 1941–45 are 8,668,400 comprising 6,329,600 combat related deaths, 555,500 non-combat deaths.[309] 500,000 missing in action and 1,103,300 POW dead and another 180,000 liberated POWs who most likely emigrated to other countries.[310][311] Figures include Navy losses of 154,771.[312] Non-combat deaths include 157,000 sentenced to death by court martial.[313]
  3. Casualties in 1939–40 include the following dead and missing: Battle of Khalkhin Gol in 1939 (8,931), Invasion of Poland of 1939 (1,139), Winter War with Finland (1939–40) (126,875).[286]
  4. The number of wounded includes 2,576,000 permanently disabled.[314]
  5. The official Russian figure for total POW held by the Germans is 4,059,000; the number of Soviet POW who survived the war was 2,016,000, including 180,000 who most likely emigrated to other countries, and an additional 939,700 POW and MIA who were redrafted as territory was liberated. This leaves 1,103,000 POW dead. However, western historians put the number of POW held by the Germans at 5.7 million and about 3 million as dead in captivity (in the official Russian figures 1.1 million are military POW and remaining balance of about 2 million are included with civilian war dead).[310][315]
  6. Conscripted reservists is an estimate of men called up, primarily in 1941, who were killed in battle or died as POWs before being listed on active strength. Soviet and Russian sources classify these losses as civilian deaths.[289]
British Commonwealth
  1. Number served: UK and Crown Colonies (5,896,000); India-(British colonial administration) (2,582,000), Australia (993,000); Canada (1,100,000); New Zealand (295,000); South Africa (250,000).[316]
  2. Total war related deaths reported by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission: UK and Crown Colonies (383,898); India-(British colonial administration) (87,026), Australia (40,696); Canada (45,388); New Zealand (11,926); South Africa (11,914).[317]
  3. Total military dead for the United Kingdom alone (according to preliminary 1945 figures): 264,443. Royal Navy (50,758); British Army (144,079); Royal Air Force (69,606).[291][318]
  4. Wounded: UK and Crown Colonies (284,049); India-(British colonial administration) (64,354), Australia (39,803); Canada (53,174); New Zealand (19,314); South Africa (14,363).[291][292][319]
  5. Prisoner of war: UK and Crown Colonies (180,488); India-(British colonial administration) (79,481); Australia (26,358); South Africa (14,750); Canada (9,334); New Zealand (8,415).[291][292][319]
  6. The Debt of Honour Register from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission lists the 1.7m men and women of the Commonwealth forces who died during the two world wars.[320]
U.S.
  1. Battle deaths (including Army POWs who died in captivity, does not include those who died of disease and accidents)[294] were 293,121: Army 234,874 (including Army Air Forces 52,173); Navy/Coast Guard 38,257; Marine Corps 19,990 (185,179 deaths occurred in the European/Atlantic theater of operations and 107,903 deaths occurred in Asia/Pacific theater of operations).[321][294][322]
  2. During World War II, 14,059 American POWs died in enemy captivity throughout the war (12,935 held by Japan and 1,124 held by Germany).[323]
  3. During World War II, 1.2 million African Americans served in the U.S. Armed Forces and 708 were killed in action. 350,000 American women served in the Armed Forces during World War II and 16 were killed in action.[324] During World War II, 26,000 Japanese-Americans served in the Armed Forces and over 800 were killed in action.[325]

Commonwealth military casualties

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) Annual Report 2014–2015[63] is the source of the military dead for the British Empire. The war dead totals listed in the report are based on the research by the CWGC to identify and commemorate Commonwealth war dead. The statistics tabulated by the CWGC are representative of the number of names commemorated for all servicemen/women of the Armed Forces of the Commonwealth and former UK Dependencies, whose death was attributable to their war service. Some auxiliary and civilian organizations are also accorded war grave status if death occurred under certain specified conditions. For the purposes of CWGC the dates of inclusion for Commonwealth War Dead are 3 September 1939 to 31 December 1947.

See also

Footnotes

^A  Albania

  • No reliable statistics on Albania's wartime losses exist, but the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration reported about 30,000 Albanian war dead. Albanian official statistics claim somewhat higher losses.[22]
  • Jewish Holocaust victims totalled 200, these Jews were Yugoslav citizens resident in Albania. Jews of Albanian origin survived the Holocaust.[195]

^B  Australia

  • The Australian War Memorial[23] reports 39,648 military deaths. This figure includes all personnel who died from war-related causes during 1939–47.
  • According to official statistics Australian battle casualties included 27,073 killed, died of wounds or died as POW; wounded or injured in action were 23,477, these figures exclude non-battle casualties, such as deaths in non operational areas and deaths due to natural causes.[326][327]
  • The Australian government does not regard merchant mariners as military personnel and the 349 Australians killed in action while crewing merchant ships around the world,[328] are included in the total civilian deaths. Other civilian fatalities were due to air raids and attacks on passenger ships.
  • The preliminary data for Australian losses included 23,365 killed, 6,030 missing, 39,803 wounded, and 26,363 POWs.[319]

^C  Austria

  • Military war dead reported by Rüdiger Overmans of 261,000 are included with Germany.[304]
  • Austrian civilian casualties were 99,700 victims of Nazi persecution and 24,000 killed in Allied air raids. The Austrian government provides the following information on human losses during the rule of the Nazis. "For Austria the consequences of the Nazi regime and the Second World War were disastrous: During this period 2,700 Austrians had been executed and more than 16,000 citizens murdered in the concentration camps. Some 16,000 Austrians were killed in prison, while over 67,000 Austrian Jews were deported to death camps, only 2,000 of them lived to see the end of the war. In addition, 247,000 Austrians lost their lives serving in the army of the Third Reich or were reported missing, and 24,000 civilians were killed during bombing" raids.[153]

^D  Belgium

  • Belgian government sources reported 12,000 military war dead which included (8,800 killed, 500 missing in action, 200 executed, 800 resistance movement fighters and 1,800 POWs) and civilian losses of 73,000 which included (32,200 deaths due to military operations, 3,400 executed, 8,500 political deportees, 5,000 workers in Germany and 27,000 Jewish Holocaust victims).[329]
  • Losses of about 10,000 in the German Armed Forces are not included in these figures, they are included with German military casualties.[330]

^E  Brazil

^F  Bulgaria

  • Total Bulgarian military war dead were 18,500 including 6,671 battle deaths.[25]
  • There were 3,000 civilian deaths in Allied air raids including 1,400 in the bombing of Sofia.[28]
  • A Russian historian in a handbook of human losses in the 20th century has provided the following assessment of Bulgarian casualties:Military deaths: 2,000 military Axis occupation forces in Yugoslavia and Greece; 10,124 dead as allies of the USSR and 10,000 Anti-Fascist Partisan deaths.[332] Regarding partisan and civilian casualties Erlikman notes "According to the official data of the royal government 2,320 were killed and 199 executed. The communists claim that 20–35,000 persons died. In reality, deaths were 10,000, including an unknown number of civilians."[332]

^G  Burma

^H  Canada

  • The Canadian War Museum puts military losses at 42,000 plus 1,600 Merchant Navy deaths. An additional 700 military dead from Newfoundland are included with the U.K.[31]
  • Library and Archives Canada puts military losses at 44,090 (24,525 Army, 17,397 Air Force, 2,168 Navy.)[334]
  • The preliminary data for Canadian losses included killed 37,476, missing 1,843, wounded 53,174 and POW 9,045.[319]

^I  China Sources for total Chinese war dead are divergent and range from 10 to 20 million as detailed below.

  • John W. Dower has noted "So great was the devastation and suffering in China that in the end it is necessary to speak of uncertain "millions" of deaths. Certainly, it is reasonable to think in general terms of approximately 10 million Chinese war dead, a total surpassed only by the Soviet Union." Dower cited a United Nations report from 1947 that put Chinese war dead at 9 million.[44]
  • According to Rana Mitter "the death toll on China is still being calculated, but conservative estimates number the dead at 14 million".[335] Rana Mitter cited the estimate of Chinese casualties by Odd Arne Westad of 2 million combat deaths and 12 million civilian deaths, Mitter also cited a Chinese study published in 2006 that put the death toll in the war at 8 to 10 million.[336]
  • An academic study of the Chinese population concluded that "a conservative estimate would put total human casualties directly caused by the war of 1937–1945 at between 15,000,000 and 20,000,000".[37] This study cited a Chinese Nationalist source that put total civilian casualties at 2,144,048 =(1,073,496 killed; 237,319 wounded; 71,050 captured by Japanese; 335,934 killed in Japanese air raids; 426,249 wounded in air raids), military casualties at 6,750,000 in 1937–1943 (1,500,000 killed; 3,000,000 wounded; 750,000 missing; 1,500,000 deaths caused by sickness, etc.[337]) In addition 960,000 collaborator forces and 446,736 Communist were killed or wounded.[337]
  • The official Chinese government (communist) statistic for China's civilian and military casualties in the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937–1945 is 20 million dead and 15 million wounded.[10]
  • Chinese scholar Bianxiu Yue has published a study of China's population losses in the Second Sino-Japanese War. He put total Chinese losses at 20.6 million dead and 14.2 million injured.[338]
  • Official Nationalist Chinese casualty figures were: killed 1,319,958; wounded 1,716,335 and missing 130,126,[339] An academic study of the Chinese population concluded that these figures are "unreasonably low" and "highly suspect".[340]
  • R. J. Rummel's estimate of total war dead in 1937–45 is 19,605,000.[35] Military dead: 3,400,000 (including 400,000 POW) Nationalist/Communist, and 432,000 collaborator forces. Civilian war deaths: 3,808,000 killed in fighting and 3,549,000 victims of Japanese war crimes (not including an additional 400,000 POWs). Other deaths: Repression by Chinese Nationalists 5,907,000 (3,081,000 military conscripts who died due to mistreatment and 2,826,000 civilian deaths caused by Nationalist government, including the 1938 Yellow River flood); political repression by Chinese Communists 250,000 and by Warlords 110,000. Additional deaths due to famine were 2,250,000.
  • Werner Gruhl estimates China's total war losses at 15,554,000, Civilians :12,392,000 including (8,191,000) due to the Japanese brutality and military dead 3,162,000.[36]

^J  Cuba

  • Cuba lost 5 merchant ships and 79 merchant mariners died.[27]

^K  Czechoslovakia

  • According to the Czechoslovak State Statistical Office the population at 1/1/1939 (within post war 1945–1992 borders) was 14,612,000.[38] The population in 1939 included about 3.3 million ethnic Germans that were expelled after the war or were German military casualties during the war.
  • Russian demographer Boris Urlanis estimated Czechoslovak war dead of 340,000 persons, 46,000 military and 294,000 civilians.[40]
  • A Russian historian in a handbook of human losses in the 20th century has provided the following assessment of Czechoslovak casualties:[39]
    35,000 Military deaths: including: killed during 1938 occupation (171); Czechoslovak Forces with the Western Allies (3,220); Czechoslovak military units on Eastern front (4,570); Slovak Republic Axis forces (7,000); Czechs in German forces (5,000), partisan losses 10,000 and (5,000) POWs.
    320,000 Civilian deaths: (10,000) in bombing and shelling; (22,000) executed; (285,000 in camps including 270,000 Jews, 8,000 Roma); and (3,000) forced laborers in Germany.[39]

^L  Denmark

  • The Danish Ministry of Education has detailed Denmark's losses in the war of about 8,000 persons including 2,685 killed in Denmark in bombing raids, resistance fighters and those executed by the Germans and 3,000 who died outside Denmark including (2,000 merchant seamen, 63 serving with Allied forces, 600 in German camps, 400 workers in Germany). In addition 2,000 Danish volunteers were killed serving in the German military.[41]

^M  Dutch East Indies

  • The United Nations reported in 1947 that "about 30,000 Europeans and 300,000 Indonesian internees and forced laborers died during the occupation." They reported, "The total number who were killed by the Japanese, or who died from, hunger, disease and lack of medical attention is estimated at 3,000,000 for Java alone, 1,000,000 for the Outer Islands. Altogether 35,000 of the 240,000 Europeans died; most of them were men of working age."[341]
  • John W. Dower cited the 1947 UN report that estimated 4 million famine and forced labor dead during the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies.[44]
  • Werner Gruhl estimated the civilian death toll due to the war and Japanese occupation at 3,000,000 Indonesians and 30,000 interned Europeans.[342]
  • A discussion of the famine in Java during 1944–45, leads Pierre van der Eng to conclude that 2.4 million Indonesians perished.[14]
  • Dutch Military losses in Asia were 2,500 killed in the 1942 Dutch East Indies campaign.[343]
  • Data from the Netherlands Institute of War Documentation puts the number of Dutch POW captured by the Japanese at 37,000 of whom 8,500 died.[344]
  • The Japanese interned 105,530 Dutch civilians in the East Indies, of whom 13,567 died.[344]

^MA  Egypt

  • Egyptian military casualties were 1,125 killed and 1,308 wounded. The British used the Egyptian army to guard lines of communication and to clear minefields.[345]

^N  Estonia

  • Estonia's human losses due to the Soviet and German occupation of Estonia from 1940 to 1945 were approximately 67,000 persons based on a study by Estonian State Commission on Examination of Policies of Repression.[47][261]
  • The first Soviet occupation of Estonia in 1940–41 resulted in 43,900 people dead or missing, including (7,800) arrested persons who were murdered or perished in the Soviet Union; (6,000) deported persons who perished in the Soviet Union; (24,000) mobilized persons who perished in the Soviet Union and (1,100) persons who went missing.[261]
  • Losses during the 1941–1944 Occupation of Estonia by Nazi Germany were 23,040, including (7,800) executed by Nazis and (1,040) killed in prison camps. (200) people died in forced labor in Germany. (800) deaths in Soviet bombing raids against Estonian cities, (1,000) killed in Allied air raids on Germany and (1,000) perished at sea while attempting to flee the country in 1944–45. (10,000) Estonians were war dead in the German armed forces and (1,000) surrendered POW were executed by the Soviets.[346] Included in the above figures is the genocide of (243) Roma people and (929) Jews.[347][261]
  • After the reoccupation by the USSR, 16,000 Estonians died in Soviet repressions during 1944–53.[348][261]
  • Total deaths from 1940 to 1953 due to the war and the Soviet occupation were approximately 83,000 persons (7.3% of the population).[47][261]

^O  Ethiopia

  • Total military and civilian dead in the East African Campaign were 100,000 including 15,000 native military with Italian forces.[48]
  • Small and Singer put the military losses at 5,000.[349]
  • The deaths of African soldiers conscripted by Italy are not included with the Italian war dead. The Italian Ministry of Defense estimated 10,000 deaths of native soldiers in East African Campaign.[350]
  • These totals do not include losses in the Italian Second Italo-Abyssinian War and Italian occupation from 1935 to 1941. The official Ethiopian government report lists 760,000 deaths due to the war and Italian occupation from 1935 to 1941.[351] However, R.J. Rummel estimates 200,000 Ethiopians and Libyans were killed by the Italians from the 1920s–1941 "based on Discovery TV Cable Channel Program 'Timewatch'", which aired January 17, 1992.[352]

^P  Finland

  • Military dead include killed and missing from the Winter War and Continuation War with the Soviet Union between 1939 and 1944, as well as action against German forces in the Lapland War 1944–45. Winter War (1939–40) losses were approximately 27,000 military deaths, Continuation War (1941–44) were 66,000, and 1,000 in Lapland War (1944–45).[50]
  • The Finnish National Archives website's database lists the names of the 94,676 Finnish war dead between 1939 and 1945. The database includes all servicemen and women who died during being listed in the Finnish army, navy or the air force. It also includes foreign volunteers who died during their service in Finland and Finnish SS-men who died while serving in the German army. The database contains civilians in case they have been buried at a military cemetery. That was sometimes done if the deceased was, for example, an ammunition worker, air raid victim or a civilian worker who for some other reason died because of the war. Some parishes continued burying in the Second World War military cemeteries up to the 1980s.[49]
  • Soviet sources list the deaths of 403 of the 2,377 Finnish POW taken in the War.[353]
  • 1,407 Finnish volunteers served in the Finnish Volunteer Battalion of the Waffen-SS and 256 were killed in action.[citation needed]
  • Civilian war dead were approximately 2,100,[50][51] due in part to the bombing of Helsinki in World War II.

^Q  France

  • French military war of 210,000 dead include 150,000 regular forces (1939–40 Battle of France 92,000; 1940–45 on Western Front (World War II) 58,000); 20,000 French resistance fighters and 40,000 POWs in Germany.[354] Civilian losses of 390,000 include: 60,000 killed in allied (mainly American) bombardments,[355] 60,000 in land fighting, 30,000 murdered in executions, 60,000 political deportees, 40,000 workers in Germany, 100,000 victims of Nazi genocide (Jews & Roma) and 40,000 French nationals in the German Armed forces who were conscripted in Alsace-Lorraine.[354]
  • The French Ministry of Defense puts French military war dead at 200,000.[356] They note that these losses include combatants from the French colonies as well as metropolitan France; regular soldiers and members of the resistance.[357]
  • Vadim Erlikman, a Russian historian, estimates losses of Africans in the French Colonial Forces at about 22,000.[358]
  • 752 civilians were killed during the U.S. air attacks on French Tunisia in 1942–43.[359]
  • R. J. Rummel estimates the deaths of 20,000 anti-Fascist Spanish refugees resident in France who were deported to Nazi camps, these deaths are included with French civilian casualties.[202]

^R  French Indochina

  • John W. Dower estimated 1.0 million deaths due to Vietnamese Famine of 1945 during Japanese occupation.[271]
  • Werner Gruhl estimates the civilian death toll due to the war and Japanese occupation at 1,500,000.[342]
  • Vietnamese sources put the number of deaths during the 1944–45 famine in North Vietnam at between 1 and 2 million.[52]

^S  Germany The following notes summarize German casualties, the details are presented in German casualties in World War II.

German population

  • The 1939 Population for Germany within 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png was 69.3 million persons.[53]
  • Foreign nationals of German ancestry in the countries of East-Central Europe were subject to conscription by Nazi Germany during the war. According to a 1958 report by the West German Statistisches Bundesamt (Federal Statistical Office) the pre war ethnic German population in eastern Europe was 7,423,300 persons (249,500 Baltic states & Memel; 380,000 Danzig; 1,371,000 Poland (1939 Borders) File:Rzeczpospolita 1923.png - Wikimedia Commons; 3,477,000 Czechoslovakia; 623,000 Hungary; 536,800 Yugoslavia; and 786,000 Romania).[360][361] These German estimates are disputed. A recent analysis by a Polish scholar found that "Generally speaking, the German estimates... are not only highly arbitrary, but also clearly tendentious in presentation of the German losses". He maintains that the German government figures from 1958 overstated the total number of the ethnic Germans living in Poland prior to war as well as the total civilian deaths due to the post war expulsions.[362]

Total German war dead

  • (1949) The West German Statistisches Bundesamt (Federal Statistical Office)estimated total war dead of 5,483,000; (3,250,000)military; (500,000) civilians killed in bombing raids and the land campaign; (1,533,000) deaths in the expulsions from Poland and (200,000) victims of Nazi racial, religious or political persecution. These figures are for Germany in 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png and do not include Austria or foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe.[363]
  • (1953) The German economist de:Bruno Gleitze from the German Institute for Economic Research estimated total war dead of 6,000,000; (3,100,000) military; (600,000) civilians killed in bombing raids and the land campaign; (800,000) deaths to expulsion from Poland (300,000) victims of Nazi racial, religious or political persecution, (1,200,000) increase in natural deaths due to the war. These figures are for Germany in 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png and do not include Austria or foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe.[364]
  • (1956) The West German Statistisches Bundesamt (Federal Statistical Office)estimated total war dead of 5,650,000 = (3,760,000) military; (430,000) civilians killed in bombing raids and the land campaign; (1,260,000) deaths to expulsion from Poland and (200,000) victims of Nazi racial, religious or political persecution. These figures are for Germany in 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png and do not include Austria or foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe.[162]
  • (1961) The West German government issued a statement listing a total of 7,032,800 war dead: (military dead 3,760,000 in prewar 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png and 432,000 foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe); (430,000 civilians killed in bombing raids and the land campaign in prewar 1937 borders); (300,000 victims of Nazi racial, religious or political persecution including 170,000 Jews); (expulsion dead 1,224,900 in prewar 1937 borders and 885,900 foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe). These figures do not include Austria.[365] The Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1961, listed Austrian casualties as 250,000 military dead and 24,000 civilians killed in bombing raids[152]
  • (1984) A German demographic study estimated 6,900,000 deaths caused by the war in prewar 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png. (3,800,000) military and (3,100,000) civilians.[53]
  • (1991) A German demographic study estimated 5,450,000 to 5,600,000 war dead (4,300,000 military dead; 430,000 civilians killed in bombing raids and the land campaign and 882,000 deaths due to expulsions from Poland). These figures are for Germany in 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png and do not include Austria or foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe.[366]
  • (1998) A German demographic study estimated 5,500,000 to 6,900,000 war dead. These figures vary because of the shift of borders between 1937 and 1940.[367]
  • (2005) The German government issued a report listing total war dead of 7,375,800 (3,100,000 soldiers killed; 1,200,000 soldiers missing; 500,000 civilians killed in bombing raids; 2,251,500 civilian victims of expulsions and deportations; 24,300 Austrian civilians killed and 300,000 victims of Nazi racial, religious or political persecution. These figures include Austria and foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe.)[368]

German military casualties

  • (1945) The casualty figures compiled by the German High Command (OKW) as of January 31, 1945 put total military losses at 2,001,399 dead, 1,902,704 missing and POW held by Allies and 4,429,875 wounded.[369]
  • (1946) The Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. estimated German military dead at 3,250,000.[370]
  • (1947) The combined staff of the U.K., Canada and the U.S. prepared "A study of the employment of German manpower from 1933–1945". They estimated German casualties up until April 30, 1945, at 2,230,324 dead, 2,870,404 missing and POW held by Allies.[371][372]
  • (1960) The West German government issued figures of the war losses. Total military dead were put at 4,440,000 (3,760,000 in prewar 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png, 430,000 foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe and 250,000 Austria).[152]
  • (1974) The Maschke Commission found that about 1.2 million German military personnel reported as missing more than likely died as POWs, including 1.1 million in the USSR.[373]
  • (1985) The Deutsche Dienststelle (WASt) has been responsible for providing information for the families of those military personnel who were killed or went missing in the war, they do not compile figures of the total war dead. By 1985 they had identified 3.1 million confirmed dead and 1.2 million missing and presumed dead.[372] The Deutsche Dienststelle (WASt) reported the same figures in 2005.[368]
  • (1993) The Russian historian Grigoriy Krivosheyev puts the losses of the "Vlasovites, Balts and Muslims etc." in German service at 215,000[374] According to Krivosheev, 450,600 German POWs died in Soviet captivity (356,700 in camps and 93,900 in transit).[375]
  • (2000) Rüdiger Overmans, an associate of the German Armed Forces Military History Research Office,[376] provided a reassessment of German military war dead based on a statistical survey of German military personnel records at the Deutsche Dienststelle (WASt). The Overmans research project was financed by a private foundation and published with the endorsement of the German Armed Forces Military History Research Office of the Federal Ministry of Defense (Germany). The study found that the statistics compiled by German military during the war were incomplete and did not provide an accurate accounting of casualties. The research by Overmans concluded that German military dead and missing were 5,318,000 (4,456,000 in prewar 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png and 539,000 foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe, 261,000 Austria and 63,000 foreign nationals from western European nations). The Overmans study did not include Soviet citizens in German service.[55] The details of the Overmans study are presented in German casualties in World War II. In a separate study, Overmans concluded that the actual death toll of German POWs was about 1.1 million men (including 1.0 million in the USSR).[377]

Civilian Casualties

  1. ^S2  German civilian casualties are combined from (a) air raid dead, (b) racial, religious and political persecution and (c) casualties due to expulsion of the Germans from east-central Europe:
    (a) Official German and Austrian sources from the 1950s cite 434,000 air raid dead (410,000 in Germany, 24,000 in) Austria[378] The figure cited by Overy (2013) is 353,000 air raid dead.[379]
    (b) The number of victims of Nazi persecution in Germany and Austria (victims of the Nazi euthanasia program) is estimated at close to 400,000 (300,000 in Germany, 100,000 in Austria).[380][153] According to the German government the euthanasia accounted for an additional 200,000 victims.[381]
    (c) The number of victims of the flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50) is contentious. Estimates in the 1960s cited a total of 2,111,000 deaths,[382][383] and the German government as of 2005 still maintained a number of "ca. 2 million".[384] Direct civilian deaths due to the expulsion of Germans is estimated at 600,000 by the German Federal Archive (1974)[385] and at 500,000 to 600,000 by Haar (2009).[386] The substantial difference of close to 1.5 million comprises people whose fate is uncertain in the reported German statistics. The German government maintains that these deaths are due to famine and disease during the flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50)[387] This was disputed by historian Ingo Haar who maintains that the difference classified as missing is due to a decline in births, the assimilation of ethnic Germans in Eastern Europe after the war, the understatement of military casualties and murdered Jews.[386]

Civilian casualties in air raids

    1- The summary report of September 30, 1945 put total casualties for the entire period of the war at 305,000 killed and 780,000 wounded.[388]
    2- The section Effects of Strategic Bombing on the German War Economy of October 31, 1945 put the losses at 375,000 killed and 625,000 wounded.[388]
    3- The section The Effect of Bombing on Health and Medical Care in Germany of January 1947 made a preliminary calculated estimate of air raid dead at 422,000. Regarding overall losses, they concluded that "It was further estimated that an additional number, approximately 25% of known deaths in 1944–45, were still unrecovered and unrecorded. With an addition of this estimate of 1944–45 unrecorded deaths, the final estimation gave in round numbers a half a million German civilians killed by Allied aerial attacks."[388]

  • (1956) A German government study put German air war dead at 635,000; 500,000 killed by allied strategic bombing and 135,000 refugees killed during the evacuations from eastern Europe in 1945. These figures include 593,000 Germany in 1937 borders File:DR1937.1.png (410,000 civilians, 32,000 foreigners and POW and 23,000 military and Police killed in strategic bombing and 127,000 civilians and 1,000 military and Police refugees fleeing on the eastern front). There were an additional 42,000 dead in Austria and the annexed territories (26,000 civilians, 7,000 foreigners and POW and 1,000 military and Police were killed in strategic bombing and 7,000 refugees fleeing on the eastern front).[389][390][391]
  • In 2014, Historian Richard Overy published a study of the air war, The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War Over Europe 1940–1945, in which he disputed the official German figures of air war dead. He estimated total air raid deaths at 353,000. Overy maintains that the German estimates are based on incorrect speculations for losses during the last three months of the war when there was a gap in the record keeping system. He points out that the figures for air raid dead in the last three months of the war were estimated in the West German figures from 1956 at 300,000 people which he believes is not plausible. The official figures include an inflated total of 60,000 in the Bombing of Dresden and the inclusion of refugees fleeing westward.[156]

Civilians killed in 1945 military campaign

  • The West German government in made a rough estimate in 1956 of 20,000 civilians killed during the 1945 military campaign in current post war German borders, not including the former German territories in Poland.[152] However, there is a more recent estimate of 22,000 civilians killed during the fighting in Berlin only.[392]

Deaths due to Nazi political, racial and religious persecution

  • The West German government put the number of Germans killed by the Nazi political, racial and religious persecution at 300,000 (including 170,000 German Jews).[368][393]
  • A 2003 report by the German Federal Archive put the total murdered during the Action T4 Euthanasia program at over 200,000 persons.[394]

Expulsion and flight of ethnic Germans The following notes summarize German expulsion casualties, the details are presented in the flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–1950), the forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union' and the Demographic estimates of the flight and expulsion of Germans. The figures for these losses are currently disputed, estimates of the total deaths range from 500,000 to 2,000,000. The death toll attributable to the flight and expulsions was estimated at 2.2 million by the West German government in 1958.[395] German government reports which were released to the public in 1987 and 1989 have caused some historians in Germany to put the actual total at 500,000 to 600,000.[396] English language sources put the death toll at 2 to 3 million based on the West German government statistical analysis of the 1950s.[397][398][399][400][401][402][403][404][405][406]

  • (1950) The West German government made a preliminary estimate of 3.0 million civilian deaths in the expulsions.(1.5 million in prewar 1937 Germany File:Oder-neisse.gif and 1.5 million foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe)[407]
  • (1954–1961) The Schieder commission made preliminary estimates the civilian death toll in the expulsions of about 2.3 million persons, broken out as follows: 2,000,000 Poland (in post-war borders) and the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia; 225,600 Czechoslovakia; 69,000 Yugoslavia; 40,000 Romania; 6,000 Hungary. These preliminary figures were superseded with the publication of the 1958 West German demographic study.[408]
  • (1958) A West German government demographic study estimated 2,225,000 civilians died during the flight during the war, post war expulsions and the Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union, broken out as follows: Germany in 1937 borders File:Oder-neisse.gif 1,339,000; Poland in 1939 borders File:Rzeczpospolita 1923.png - Wikimedia Commons 185,000; Danzig 83,000; Czechoslovakia 273,000; Yugoslavia 136,000; Romania 101,000; Hungary 57,000; Baltic States 51,000.[152][395]
  • (1965), The search service of the German churches and Red Cross was able to confirm 473,013 civilian deaths in eastern Europe due to the expulsions, broken out as follows: 367,392 Poland (in post war borders); 18,889 Sudetenland; 64,779 Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Yugoslavia; 9,064 Baltic States; and 12,889 Germans resettled in Poland. There were an additional 1,905,991 unsolved cases of persons reported missing. The results of this survey were kept secret until 1987.[409][410][411][412][413]
  • (1966) The West German Federal Ministry for Expellees, Refugees and War Victims issued a statement that put the number of expulsion dead at 2,111,000 (1,225,000 Germany in 1937 borders File:Oder-neisse.gif and 886,000 foreign nationals of German ancestry in eastern Europe)[383][382]
  • (1974) A study by the German Federal Archive estimated a death toll of 600,000 of civilians in the expulsions and deportations to the USSR. (400,000 in Poland (in post war borders) and the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia; 130,000 in Czechoslovakia and 80,000 in Yugoslavia.) The authors of the report maintain that these figures cover only those deaths caused by violent acts and deaths in forced labor and internment camps. They also stated that their figures do not include deaths due to malnutrition and disease. This report was kept secret and not published until 1989.[414]
  • (1985) A demographic analysis which has the support of the German government, estimated 2,020,000 civilians died during the post war expulsions and the forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union broken out as follows: (870,000Germany in 1937 borders east of the Oder–Neisse line; 108,000 Germans resettled in Poland during the war; 174,000 Poland in 1939 borders File:Rzeczpospolita 1923.png - Wikimedia Commons; 40,000 Danzig; 220,000 Czechoslovakia; 106,000 Yugoslavia; 75,000 Romania; 84,000 Hungary; 33,000 Baltic States; 310,000 USSR)[415]
  • The German government currently maintains that 2.0 million civilians perished in the flight and expulsion from Eastern Europe. In 2006, Christoph Bergner, Secretary of State in Germany's Bureau for Inner Affairs maintainted that the figure of 2 million deaths is correct because it includes the deaths from malnutrition and disease of those civilians subject to the expulsions.[416]
  • A 2005 report by the German government search service put the death toll at 2,251,500, they did not provide details of the figure[417] The current position in 2015 of the German government Federal Agency for Civic Education is that 2 million civilians perished in the expulsions, they cited as the source for this figure Gerhard Reichling, Die deutschen Vertriebenen in Zahlen.[418]

German government figures of 2.0 to 2.5 million civilian deaths due to expulsions have been disputed by scholars since the publication of the results of the German church search service survey and the report by the German Federal Archive.[419][420][421][422][423][424][425][426]

  • German historian Rüdiger Overmans (2000) published a study of German military casualties; this project did not investigate civilian expulsion deaths.[427] Overmans did, however, provide a critical analysis of the previous studies by German government of the human losses in the expulsions. Overmans maintains that these studies lack adequate support, that a figure of 500,000 expulsion dead is credible, and that there are more arguments for the lower figures rather than the higher figures. He believes that new research is needed to determine the correct balance of the human losses in the expulsions. According to him, the figure of 1.9 million missing persons reported by the search service is unreliable as it includes military dead and persons of dubious German ancestry who were not expelled after the war but remained in eastern Europe, also the figures for expellees living in the GDR was understated.[421][422][428]
  • In 2006, Historian Ingo Haar controversially disputed the official figures in an article published on 14 November 2006 in the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung.[419] Haar argued for a total of 500,000 to 600,000 victims.[419][421][422][423][424][425][426] Christoph Bergner, Secretary of state in the German Federal Ministry of the Interior, argued in an interview on 29 November against revising the official count of 2.0 to 2.5 million victims, and that the controversy was based on what he maintains is misunderstanding, as he stated that Haar's figures represent the number violent deaths, while the official figures include the much more numerous deaths due to exhaustion, disease and starvation which occurred in the wake of the expulsions and deportations.[387] Haar has published three articles in academic journals during 2006–2009 which covered the background of the research by the West German government on the expulsions. According to Haar the numbers were set too high for postwar political reasons. Haar argues that the government figure of two million is overstated. He maintains the total number of known German deaths east of the Oder–Neisse line and the ethnic Germans in East Central Europe lies between 500,000 and 600,000, including those deported to the Soviet Union. Haar argues that the number reported missing includes a decline in births, persons of dubious German nationality, military deaths and murdered Jews.[386][424][425][426]
  • German historians Hans Henning Hahn and Eva Hahn (2010) have published a detailed study of the flight and expulsions. They maintain that figures related to flight and expulsion have been manipulated by the German government due to political pressure. The Hahn's believe the official German figure of 2 million deaths is an historical myth, lacking foundation. They place the ultimate blame for the mass flight and expulsion on the wartime policy of the Nazis in Eastern Europe. The Hahn's maintain that the 473,013 confirmed deaths is a correct accounting of the losses. Most of these losses occurred during the Nazi organized flight and evacuation during the war, and the forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union; they point out that there are 80,522 confirmed deaths in the postwar internment camps.[420]
  • The German Historical Museum puts the number of deaths due to the expulsions at 600,000, they maintain that the figure of 2 million deaths in the previous government studies cannot be supported.[429]
  • A joint Czech–German Historical Commission determined that between 15,000 and 30,000 Germans perished in the expulsions. The commission found that the demographic estimates by the German government of 220,000 to 270,000 civilian deaths due to expulsions from Czechoslovakia were based on faulty data. The Commission determined that the demographic estimates by the German government counted as missing 90,000 ethnic Germans assimilated into the Czech population; military deaths were understated and that the 1950 census data used to compute the demographic losses was unreliable.[430]
  • Polish historian Bernadetta Nitschke has provided a summary of the research in Poland on German losses due to the flight and resettlement of the Germans from Poland, not including other eastern European countries. Nitschke contrasted the estimate of 1.6 million deaths in Poland reported by the West German government in the 1950s with the figure of 400,000 (in Poland only) that was disclosed in 1989. According to Nitschke most of the civilian deaths occurred during the flight and evacuation during the war, the deportation to the U.S.S.R. for forced labor, and after the resettlement in the Soviet occupation zone in post war Germany.[431]
  • Polish historians Witold Sienkiewicz and Grzegorz Hryciuk believe that between 600,000 and 1.2 million German civilians perished during the wartime evacuations. The main causes of death were cold, stress, and bombing.[432] According to Sienkiewicz and Hryciuk between 200,000 and 250,000 persons were held in postwar Polish internment camps and between 15,000 and 60,000 perished.[433]

Post war increase in natural deaths

  • German government figures of war losses do not include the increase in natural deaths with war casualties. The German economist Bruno Gleitze from the German Institute for Economic Research estimated that there were 1,200,000 excess deaths caused by the harsh conditions in Germany during and after the war. Gleitze estimated 400,000 excess deaths during the war and 800,000 in post war Germany[364] The West German Statistisches Bundesamt put the actual deaths in 1939–46 due to natural causes at 7,130,000 persons, the demographic study by Peter Marschalck estimated the expected deaths in peacetime due to natural causes of 5,900,000 persons, a difference of 1,230,000 excess deaths.[53] In Allied-occupied Germany the shortage of food was an acute problem in 1946–47. The average kilocalorie intake per day was only 1,600 to 1,800, an amount insufficient for long-term health.[434]

^T  Greece

  • The Greek government is planning to claim reparations from Germany for war damages.[435][436]
  • The Greek National Council for Reparations from Germany reports the following casualties during the Axis occupation of Greece during World War II. Military dead 35,077, including: 13,327 killed in the Greco-Italian War of 1940–41; 1,100 with the Greek Armed Forces in the Middle East, and 20,650 partisan deaths. Civilian deaths 171,845, including: 56,225 executed by Axis forces; 105,000 dead in German concentration camps (including Jews); 7,120 deaths due to bombing; 3,500 merchant marine dead; 600,000 Famine deaths during the war.[56]
  • A study published by Cambridge University Press in 2010 estimated that Greece suffered approximately 300,000 deaths during the Axis occupation as a result of famine and malnutrition.[57]
  • Gregory Frumkin, who was throughout its existence editor of the Statistical Year-Book of the League of Nations gave the following assessment of Greek losses in the war. He points out that "the data on Greek war losses are frequently divergent and even inconsistent". His estimates for Greek losses are as follows: the war dead included 20,000 military deaths in the Greco-Italian War of 1940–41, 60,000 non-Jewish civilians, 20,000 non-Jewish deportees, 60,000 Jews and 140,000 famine deaths during the Axis occupation of Greece during World War II.[437]
  • In campaigns against the Greek Resistance the German occupiers engaged in a policy of reprisals against civilians, the most notorious were the Distomo massacre and the Massacre of Kalavryta. According to the German historian Dieter Pohl at least 25,000 but perhaps even more civilians were killed in mass executions. Pohl maintains that about 1 million persons (14% of the population) were displaced in the campaigns against the Greek Resistance because their homes were destroyed or they were expelled and became refugees.[438]

^TA  Guam

  • Guam was a United States administered territory during World War Two. The local Chamorro people were granted U.S. citizenship in the Guam Organic Act of 1950.
  • According to an official U.S. report during the Battle of Guam on December 8–10, 4 Guam local military personnel and 3 Guam residents were killed in the battle.[439] However, Japanese sources reported 40–50 of the local population killed.[440]
  • Between 1,000[58] to 2,000[59] Chamorro people were killed or otherwise died of abuse and mistreatment during the Japanese occupation of Guam from December 10, 1941, until August 10, 1944, including an estimated 600 civilians who were massacred by the Japanese during the Battle of Guam (1944).[59]

^U  Hungary

  • Tamás Stark of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences has provided the following assessment of Hungarian losses.
    Military losses were 300,000 to 310,000 including 110–120,000 killed in action and 200,000 in Soviet POW and labor camps and 20,000–25,000 Jews in Hungarian military labor service.[60] About 200,000 were from Hungary in the 1938 borders and 100,000 men who were conscripted from the annexed territories of Greater Hungary in Slovakia, Romania and Yugoslavia.[61]
    Civilian dead within the borders of present-day Hungary included 220,000 Hungarian Jews killed in the Holocaust and 44,000 deaths from military operations[61] The Jewish population of Hungary in the 1941 borders was 764,000 (445,000 in the 1938 borders and 319,000 in the annexed territories). Holocaust deaths in the 1938 borders was 200,000 not including 20,000 men conscripted as forced labor for the military.[192] During the Soviet occupation of Hungary, about 700,000 men were deported to Soviet Union, only 300,000 retrned to Hungary.[441]

^V  Iceland

  • Confirmed losses of civilian sailors due to German attacks and mines.[62]

^W  India

  • India, which was a British colony during World War II, included the present-day India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. India under British administration is sometimes referred to as the British Raj.
  • The war dead of 87,029 listed here are those reported by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.[63]
  • Gurkhas recruited from Nepal fought with the British Indian Army during the Second World War. Gurkha casualties with the British Indian Army can be broken down as: 8,985 killed or missing and 23,655 wounded.[442]
  • The preliminary 1945 data for Indian losses was, killed 24,338, missing 11,754, wounded 64,354 and POW 79,489.[319] Out of 60,000 Indian Army POWs taken at the Fall of Singapore, 11,000 died in captivity.[244]
  • The pro-Japanese Indian National Army lost 2,615 dead and missing.[29]

Bengal famine of 1943

^Y  Iraq

^Z  Ireland

  • Although neutral, an estimated 70,000 of the Irish Free State's citizens volunteered in the British military service. Some 40 Irish citizens were killed by accidental bombings in Dublin and Carlow, and 33 Irish merchant seamen were killed in U-boat attacks by Germany.[69][445] The Irish Free State (Eire) being part of the British Commonwealth during the war, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission records 51 named civilians who died within its borders from effects of enemy action.[446]

^AA  Italy

  • The Italian government issued an accounting of the war dead in 1957, they broke out the losses before and after the Armistice with Italy: military dead and missing 291,376 (204,376 pre-armistice and 87,030 post armistice). Civilian dead and missing at 153,147 (123,119 post armistice) including in air raids 61,432 (42,613 post armistice).[447] A brief summary of data from this report can be found online.[448]

           Military war dead
           Confirmed dead were 159,957 (92,767 pre-armistice, 67,090 post armistice)[449]
           Missing and presumed dead(including POWs) were 131,419 (111,579 pre-armistice, 19,840 post armistice)[450]
           Losses by branch of service: Army 201,405; Navy 22,034; Air Force 9,096; Colonial Forces 354; Chaplains 91; Fascist militia
           10,066; Paramilitary 3,252; not indicated 45,078.[451]
           Military Losses by theatre of war: Italy 74,725 (37,573 post armistice); France 2,060 (1,039 post armistice);
           Germany 25,430 (24,020 post armistice); Greece, Albania, and Yugoslavia 49,459 (10,090 post armistice);
           USSR 82,079 (3,522 post armistice); Africa 22,341 (1,565 post armistice), at sea 28,438 (5,526 post armistice);
           other and unknown 6,844 (3,695 post armistice).[452]

  • Military losses in Italy after the September 1943 Armistice with Italy, included 5,927 with the Allies, 17,488 Italian resistance movement fighters in Italy and 13,000 RSI Italian Social Republic Fascist forces.[453]
  • Included in the losses are 64,000 victims of Nazi reprisals and genocide including 30,000 POWs and 8,500 Jews.[202]
  • According to Martin Gilbert, Jewish Holocaust victims totaled 8,000 in Italy and 562 in the Italian colony of Libya[197]
  • Updated studies (2010) by the Ufficio dell'Albo d'Oro of the Italian Ministry of Defence, p. 4 Archived 2020-08-02 at the Wayback Machine have revised the military deaths to 319,207, of which 246,432 belonged to the Army, 31,347 to the Navy, 13,210 to the Air Force, 15,197 to the Partisan formations and 13,021 to the armed forces of the Italian Social Republic. The casualties recorded for Italy do not include Italians who were born in Italian colonies and possessions (ethnic Italians in Libya, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia and the Dodecanese) and in national territories that Italy lost with the Paris peace treaty of 1947 (mainly the Julian March, Istria and Zara/Zadar; a large part of the victims of the Foibe massacres are thus not included). Also Africans conscripted by Italy are not included in their figures.
  • With regards to the Partisan casualties, a ministerial study published in 1955 listed the partisans killed or executed as 35,828; however, the Ufficio dell'Albo d'Oro only considered as partisans the members of the Resistance who were civilians before joining the partisans, whereas partisans who were formerly members of the Italian armed forces (more than half those killed) were considered as members of their armed force of origin.
  • With regards to the Italian Social Republic casualties, the Ufficio dell'Albo d'Oro excludes from its lists of the fallen the individuals who committed war crimes. In the context of the RSI, where numerous war crimes were committed in the anti-partisan warfare, and many individuals were therefore involved in such crimes (especially GNR and Black Brigades personnel), this influences negatively the casualty count, under a statistical point of view. The "RSI Historical Foundation" (Fondazione RSI Istituto Storico) has drafted a list that lists the names of some 35,000 RSI military personnel killed in action or executed during and immediately after World War II (including the "revenge killings" that occurred at the end of the hostilities and in their immediate aftermath), including some 13,500 members of the Guardia Nazionale Repubblicana and Milizia Difesa Territoriale, 6,200 members of the Black Brigades, 2,800 Aeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana personnel, 1,000 Marina Nazionale Repubblicana personnel, 1,900 X MAS personnel, 800 soldiers of the "Monterosa" Division, 470 soldiers of the "Italia" Division, 1,500 soldiers of the "San Marco" Division, 300 soldiers of the "Littorio" Division, 350 soldiers of the "Tagliamento" Alpini Regiment, 730 soldiers of the 3rd and 8th Bersaglieri regiments, 4,000 troops of miscellaneous units of the Esercito Nazionale Repubblicano (excluding the above-mentioned Divisions and Alpini and Bersaglieri Regiments), 300 members of the Legione Autonoma Mobile "Ettore Muti", 200 members of the Raggruppamento Anti Partigiani, 550 members of the Italian SS, and 170 members of the Cacciatori degli Appennini Regiment.
  • This would bring the total number of Italian military personnel killed to some 341,000 (excluding colonial troops).
  • According to the official history of the Italian Army (Rovighi, Alberto (1988), Le Operazioni in Africa Orientale: (giugno 1940 – novembre 1941) [Operations in East Africa: (June 1940 – November 1941)], Rome, Stato Maggiore Esercito, Ufficio storico) From June 1940 to 16 April 1941, 11,755 askaris were killed in Italian East Africa, excluding the losses in Giuba region and eastern fronts. After that date, in the last battles in East Africa there were 490 askaris killed in the battle of Culqualber and 3,700 killed in the battle of Gondar, plus an unknown number in the battle of Amba Alagi and other minor clashes. This would mean that the number of askaris killed in East Africa was likely somewhere between 16,000 and 20,000. According to the Italian Army official history (USSME, La prima offensiva Britannica in Africa Settentrionale, tomo I, allegato 32 (page 375)), the two Libyan colonial divisions lost 1,399 soldiers killed (not counting the officers, who were Italian) in the battle of Sidi Barrani, where they were both destroyed. There was not much use of colonial troops in North Africa afterwards.[citation needed]

^AB  Japan

  • Estimates for total Japanese war dead in 1937–1945 range from at least 2.5 million[443] to 3.237 million.[454]
  • According to the Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare Japanese war dead (1937–45) totaled 3.1 million persons including 2.3 million soldiers and Army/Navy civilian employees, 500,000 civilians in Japan and 300,000 civilians living outside of Japan. These figures include military dead of 30,000 Chinese from Taiwan and 22,182 Koreans.[11]

Military dead

  • According to a report compiled by the Relief Bureau of the Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare in March 1964, combined Japanese Army and Navy deaths during the war (1937–45) numbered approximately 2,121,000; broken down as follows:[455]

             Key: Location, Army dead, Navy dead, (Total dead)
             Japan Proper: 58,100, 45,800, (103,900)
             Bonin Islands: 2,700, 12,500, (15,200)
             Okinawa: 67,900, 21,500, (89,400)
             Formosa (Taiwan): 28,500, 10,600, (39,100)
             Korea: 19,600, 6,900, (26,500)
             Sakhalin, the Aleutian, and Kuril Islands: 8,200, 3,200, (11,400)
             Manchuria: 45,900, 800, (46,700)
             China (inc. Hong Kong): 435,600, 20,100, (455,700)
             Siberia: 52,300, 400, (52,700)
             Central Pacific: 95,800, 151,400, (247,200)
             Philippines: 377,500, 121,100, (498,600)
             French Indochina: 7,900, 4,500, (12,400)
             Thailand: 6,900, 100, (7,000)
             Burma (inc. India): 163,000, 1,500, (164,500)
             Malaya & Singapore: 8,500, 2,900, (11,400)
             Andaman & Nicobar Islands: 900, 1,500, (2,400)
             Sumatra: 2,700, 500, (3,200)
             Java: 2,700, 3,800, (6,500)
             Lesser Sundas: 51,800, 1,200, (53,000)
             Borneo: 11,300, 6,700, (18,000)
             Celebes: 1,500, 4,000, (5,500)
             Moluccas: 2,600, 1,800, (4,400)
             New Guinea: 112,400, 15,200, (127,600)
             Bismarck Archipelago: 19,700, 10,800, (30,500)
             Solomon Islands: 63,200, 25,000, (88,200)
             Total: 1,647,200, 473,800, (2,121,000)
 

Overall, perhaps two thirds of all Japanese military dead came not from combat, but from starvation and disease.[456] In some cases this figure was potentially even higher, up to 80% in the Philippines[457] and a staggering 97% in New Guinea.[458]

  • According to John W. Dower, the Japanese source Showa Shi – 1959 by Shigeki Toyama put Japanese war dead in 1937–1941 in the Second Sino-Japanese War at 185,467.[443]
  • In 1949 the report of the Japanese government Economic Stabilization Board put military war dead from December 1941 to December 21, 1946, at 1,555,308 Killed and 309,402 wounded.[459][460] These figures do not include an additional 240,000 missing Army personnel. The figures of wounded show only those receiving pensions.[459] The details of these figures are as follows:[461][460]

             Army
             China after Pearl Harbor 202,958 killed and 88,920 wounded.
             vs. United States 485,717 killed and 34,679 wounded.
             vs. U.K. and Netherlands 208,026 killed and 139,225 wounded.
             vs. Australia 199,511 killed and 15,000 wounded.
             French Indochina 2,803 killed and 6,000 wounded.
             Manchuria & USSR 7,483 killed and 4,641 wounded.
             other overseas 23,388 killed and 0 wounded.
             Japan proper 10,543 killed and 6,782 wounded.
             Army total 1,140,429 killed and 295,247 wounded.
             Navy
             Sailors 300,386 killed and 12,275 wounded and missing.
             Civilians in Navy service 114,493 killed and 1,880 wounded and missing.
             Navy total 414,879 killed and 14,155 wounded and missing.
 

  • The Japanese Central Liaison Office reported in July 1947 to the Allied occupation authorities that Japanese military dead in 1935–1945 were 1,687,738 (1,340,700 Army and 347,038 Navy.)[462]
  • The Yasukuni Shrine in Japan lists a total of 191,250 war dead from 1937 to 1941 in the Second Sino-Japanese War and 2,133,915 in the Pacific War Their figures include civilians who participated in combat and Chinese(Taiwan) and Koreans in the Japanese Armed Forces.
  • According to the calculations of Werner Gruhl, Japanese military war dead were 2,565,878 (250,000 from 1931 to 1941 and 2,315,878 in 1942–45).[463]
  • John W. Dower maintains that "only one third of the military deaths occurred in actual combat, the majority being caused by illness and starvation".[443] According to Dower over 300,000 Japanese POW were missing after being captured by the Soviets. Japanese figures as of 12/31/1948 listed 469,074 missing personnel in Soviet hands, while at the same time the Soviets admitted to holding 95,000 Japanese prisoners thus leaving 374,041 surrendered Japanese personnel who were unaccounted for and presumed dead.[464] According to Dower "Known deaths of Japanese troops awaiting repatriation in Allied(non-Soviet) hands were listed as 81,090 by U.S. authorities.[464][465]
  • The Japanese Ministry of Welfare and Foreign Office reported from 1951 to 1960 that 254,000 military personnel and civilians were confirmed dead and 95,000 went missing in Soviet hands after the war. The details of these losses are as follows: 199,000 in Manchurian transit camps, 36,000 in North Korea, 9,000 on Sakhalin and 103,000 in the USSR.[466]
  • According to the Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare 65,000 soldiers and civilians were killed in the 1945 military campaign against the Soviet Union. After the war ended deaths at the hands of the Red Army and local Chinese population were 185,000 Manchuria, 28,000 in North Korea and 10,000 on Sakhalin and the Kurile islands. An additional 700,000 were taken prisoner by the Soviets were 50,000 died in forced labor in the USSR and Outer Mongolia.[467]
  • The Japanese government figures for POW deaths are not in agreement with Soviet figures. Russian sources report that the Soviets reported the POW deaths of 62,105 (61,855 Japanese and 214 collaborator forces) out of the 640,105 captured (609,448 Japanese and 30,657 collaborator forces).[468]

Civilian Dead

  • The 1949 report of the Japanese government Economic Stabilization Board detailed the casualties caused by air raids and sea bombardment. Total casualties were 668,315 including 299,485 dead, 24,010 missing and 344,820 injured. These figures include the casualties in Tokyo (東京) 97,031 dead, 6,034 missing and 113,923 injured; in Hiroshima (広島) 86,141 dead, 14,394 missing and 46,672 injured, in Nagasaki (長崎) 26,238 dead, 1,947 missing and 41,113 injured.[469][470][471] According to John W. Dower, an error which appears in English language sources puts the total killed in air raids at 668,000, a figure which includes dead, missing and injured.[464]
  • A Japanese academic study published in 1979 by The Committee for the Compilation of Materials on Damage Caused by the Atomic Bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki puts the total dead in the atomic attacks at 140,000 (± 10,000) in Hiroshima and 70,000 (± 10,000) in Nagasaki.[472] According to the authors of the report a study of atomic bomb related casualties in Hiroshima in December 1945 was "lost and not discovered until twenty years later", they cited a similar survey in Nagasaki done in December 1945.[472] The authors maintain that the lower casualty figures published in the immediate post war era did not include military personnel and missing persons.[473] The figures of dead in the atomic attacks from this study were cited by John W. Dower in his War Without Mercy.[474]
  • According to the World Nuclear Association, "In Hiroshima, of a resident civilian population of 250,000 it was estimated that 45,000 died on the first day and a further 19,000 during the subsequent four months. In Nagasaki, out of a population of 174,000, 22,000 died on the first day and another 17,000 within four months. Unrecorded deaths of military personnel and foreign workers may have added considerably to these figures. About 15 square kilometers (over 50%) of the two cities was destroyed. It is impossible to estimate the proportion of these 103,000 deaths, or of the further deaths in military personnel, which were due to radiation exposure rather than to the very high temperatures and blast pressures caused by the explosions." They noted that "To the 103,000 deaths from the blast or acute radiation exposure at Hiroshima and Nagasaki have since been added those due to radiation-induced cancers, which amounted to some 400 within 30 years, and which may ultimately reach about 550. (Some 93,000 exposed survivors were still being monitored 50 years later.)"[475]
  • The Radiation Effects Research Foundation puts the number of deaths (within two to four months), in Hiroshima at 90,000 to 166,000 persons, and in Nagasaki at 60,000 to 80,000 persons. They noted that deaths caused by the atomic bombings include those that occurred on the days of the bombings due to the overwhelming force and heat of the blasts, as well as later deaths attributable to radiation exposure. The total number of deaths is not known precisely because military personnel records in each city were destroyed; entire families perished, leaving no one to report deaths; and unknown numbers of forced laborers were present in both cities.[476]
  • The U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey published the following estimates of Japanese casualties due to U.S. bombing.

1-Summary Report (July 1946) Total civilian casualties in Japan, as a result of 9 months of air attack, including those from the atomic bombs, were approximately 806,000. Of these, approximately 330,000 were fatalities.[477]

2-United States Strategic Bombing Survey, Medical Division (1947) The bombing of Japan killed 333,000 civilians and injured 473,000. Of this total 120,000 died and 160,000 were injured in the atomic bombings, leaving 213,000 dead and 313,000 injured by conventional bombing.[478]

3-The effects of air attack on Japanese urban economy. Summary report (1947) Estimated that 252,769 Japanese were killed and 298,650 injured in the air war.[479]

4-The Effects of strategic bombing on Japanese morale Based on a survey of Japanese households the death toll was put at 900,000 dead and 1.3 million injured, the SBS noted that this figure was subject to a maximum sampling error of 30%.[480]

5-Strategic Bombing Survey The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki The most striking result of the atomic bombs was the great number of casualties. The exact number of dead and injured will never be known because of the confusion after the explosions. Persons unaccounted for might have been burned beyond recognition in the falling buildings, disposed of in one of the mass cremations of the first week of recovery, or driven out of the city to die or recover without any record remaining. No sure count of even the prepaid populations existed. Because of the decline in activity in the two port cities, the constant threat of incendiary raids, and the formal evacuation programs of the Government, an unknown number of the inhabitants had either drifter away from the cities or been removed according to plan. In this uncertain situation, estimates of casualties have generally ranged between 100,000 and 180,000 for Hiroshima, and between 50,000 and 100,000 for Nagasaki. The Survey believes the dead at Hiroshima to have been between 70,000 and 80,000, with an equal number injured; at Nagasaki over 35,000 dead and somewhat more than that injured seems the most plausible estimate. [481]

  • John W. Dower puts Japanese civilian dead in Battle of Saipan at 10,000 and 150,000 in Battle of Okinawa based on a recent study of the campaign.[464] However, American military sources put civilian dead on Okinawa at 42,000, they noted that Japanese sources indicate 50,000 Okinawan noncombatants were killed during the campaign.[482][483]
  • War related deaths of Japanese merchant marine personnel were 27,000.[484]

^AC  Korea

  • American researcher R. J. Rummel estimated 378,000 Korean dead due to forced labor in Japan and Manchuria. According to Rummel, "Information on Korean deaths under Japanese occupation is difficult to uncover. We do know that 5,400,000 Koreans were conscripted for labor beginning in 1939, but how many died can only be roughly estimated."[485]
  • Werner Gruhl estimated the civilian death toll due to the war and Japanese occupation at 533,000.[486]
  • John W. Dower has noted "Between 1939 and 1945, close to 670,000 Koreans were brought to Japan for fixed terms of work, mostly in mines and heavy industry, and it has been estimated that 60,000 or more of them died under harsh conditions of their work places. Over 10,000 others were probably killed in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki".[487]

^AD  Latvia

  • Independent Russian historian Vadim Erlikman estimated Latvian civilian war dead in 1941–45 at 220,000 (35,000 in military operations; 110,000 executed, 35,000 in Germany and 40,000 due to hunger and disease. Military dead were estimated with Soviet forces at 10,000 and 15,000 with German. POW deaths 3,000.)[84]

^AE  Lithuania

  • Independent Russian historian Vadim Erlikman estimated Lithuanian civilian war dead in 1941–45 at 345,000 (25,000 in military operations; 230,000 executed, 15,000 in Germany and 75,000 due to hunger and disease. Military dead were estimated with Soviet forces at 15,000 and 5,000 with German. POW deaths 4,000.)[86]

^AF  Luxembourg

  • Total war dead were 5,000[488] which included military losses of about 3,000 with the German Armed Forces and 200 in a separate unit attached to the Belgian Army.

^AG  Malaya and Singapore

  • The British colony of Malaya consisted of the Straits Settlements, the Federated Malay States and Unfederated Malay States. Today they are the nations Malaysia and Singapore.
  • According to John W. Dower "Malayan officials after the war claimed, possibly with exaggeration, that as many as 100,000 residents, mostly Chinese, may have been killed by the Japanese; of 73,000 Malayans transported to work on the Burma-Siam railway, 25,000 were reported to have died.[489]
  • According to Werner Gruhl in Singapore the Japanese murdered 5,000 to 10,000 Chinese in 1942. In Malaya and Singapore an estimated 50,000 Chinese were killed in this genocide by the end of the war[490]

^AH  Malta 1,493 civilians were killed and 3,734 wounded during the Siege of Malta (World War II)[89] Maltese civilians killed during the siege are also included with U.K. civilian deaths by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.

^AI  Mexico

  • Mexico lost 7 merchant ships and 63 dead merchant mariners.[27] A Mexican Air Force unit Escuadrón 201 served in the Pacific and suffered 5 combat deaths.

^AJ  Mongolia

^AK  Nauru

  • During World War II Japan occupied Nauru in August 1942 and deported 1,200 Nauruans to work as laborers in the Caroline Islands, where 463 died. The survivors returned to Nauru in January 1946.[91]

^AL  Nepal

^AM  Netherlands

  • In 1948 the Netherlands Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) issued a report of war losses. They listed 210,000 direct war casualties in the Netherlands, not including the Dutch East Indies.

      Military deaths 6,750 which included 3,900 regular Army, 2,600 Navy forces, and 250 POW in Germany.
      Civilian deaths of 203,250 which included 1,350 Merchant seaman, 2,800 executed, 2,500 dead in Dutch concentration camps,
      20,400 killed by acts of war, 104,000 Jewish Holocaust dead, 18,000 political prisoners in Germany, 27,000 workers in Germany,
      3,700 Dutch nationals in the German armed forces and 7,500 missing and presumed dead in Germany and 16,000 deaths
      in the Dutch famine of 1944. Not Included in the figure of 210,000 war dead are 70,000 "indirect war casualties",
      which are attributed to an increase in natural deaths from 1940 to 1945 and 1,650 foreign nationals killed while serving in the
      Dutch Merchant Marine.[92]

  • The Netherlands War Graves Foundation maintains a registry of the names of Dutch war dead.[492]

^AN  Newfoundland

  • Newfoundland lost 1,089 persons with U.K. and Canadian Forces during the war.[94]
  • The losses of the Newfoundland Merchant Navy are commemorated at the Allied Merchant Navy Memorial in Newfoundland,[493]
  • Civilian losses were due to the sinking of the SS Caribou in October 1942.[95]

^AO  New Zealand

  • The Auckland War Museum puts the number of World War II dead at 11,671.[96]
  • The preliminary data for New Zealand losses was killed 10,033, missing 2,129, wounded 19,314 and POW 8,453.[319]

^AP  Norway

  • According to Norwegian government sources the war dead were 10,200.[97]

          Military(Norwegian & Allied Forces) 2,000 (800 Army, 900 Navy and 100 Air).[97]
          Civilians 7,500 (3,600 Merchant seaman, 1,500 resistance fighters, 1,800 civilians killed and 600 Jews killed)[97]
          In German Armed Forces 700[97]

^AQ  Papua New Guinea

  • Civilian deaths were caused by Allied bombing and shellfire and Japanese atrocities. Both the Allies and Japanese also conscripted civilians to work as laborers and porters.[98]

^AR  Philippines

  • Philippines military losses were 57,000 including 7,000 KIA in 1941–42 campaign, 8,000 guerrillas KIA 1942–45 and 42,000 POWs(out of 98,000).[100]
  • According to Werner Gruhl the death toll due to the war and Japanese occupation at 527,000 (27,000 military dead, 141,000 massacred, 22,500 forced labor deaths and 336,500 deaths due war related famine). Civilian losses included victims of Japanese war crimes, such as the Manila massacre which claimed the lives of 100,000 Filipinos.[16]
  • Between 5,000 and 10,000 Filipinos serving with the Filipino troops, Scouts, Constabulary and Philippine Army units lost their lives on the Bataan Death March.[494]

^AS  Poland

Total Polish war dead

  • In 2009, Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota of the Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) put the figure of Poland's dead at between 5,620,000 and 5,820,000; including an estimated 150,000 Polish citizens who died due to Soviet repression. The IPN's figures include 2.7 to 2.9 million Polish Jews who were murdered in the Holocaust and 2,770,000 ethnic Poles[495] (including "Direct War Losses" −543,000; "Murdered in Camps and in Pacification" −506,000; "Deaths in prisons and Camps" 1,146,000; "Deaths outside of prisons and Camps" 473,000; "Murdered in Eastern Regions" 100,000; "Deaths in other countries" 2,000).[496] Polish researchers have determined that the Nazis murdered 2,830,000 Jews (including 1,860,000 Polish Jews) in the extermination camps in Poland, in addition over 1.0 million Polish Jews were murdered by the Einsatzgruppen in the eastern regions or died of starvation and disease while in ghettos.[495]
  • In his 2009 book, Andrzej Leon Sowa of the Jagiellonian University emphasizes the lack of reliable data concerning World War II losses. According to him, between 2.35 and 2.9 million Polish citizens of Jewish ethnicity were killed, in addition to about two million ethnic Poles. He writes that not even estimated figures are available regarding Polish citizens of German, Ukrainian or Belarusian ethnicity.[497]
  • The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum states that "[i]t is estimated that the Germans killed between 1.8 and 1.9 million non-Jewish Polish civilians during World War II. In addition, the Germans murdered at least 3 million Jewish citizens of Poland.".[498]
  • Czesław Łuczak in 1993 estimated Poland's war dead to be 5.9 to 6.0 million, including 2.9 to 3.0 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust and 2.0 million ethnic Polish victims of the German and Soviet occupations, (1.5 million under German occupation and the balance of 500,000 in the former eastern Polish regions under Soviet occupation).[499] Łuczak also included in his figures an estimated 1,000,000 war dead of Polish citizens from the ethnic Ukrainian and Belarusian ethnic groups who comprised 20% of Poland's pre-war population.[500][501]
  • Tadeusz Piotrowski estimated Poland's losses in World War II to be 5.6 million; including 5,150,000 victims of Nazi crimes against ethnic Poles and The Holocaust, 350,000 deaths during the Soviet occupation in 1940–41 and about 100,000 Poles killed in 1943–44 during the massacres of Poles in Volhynia. Losses by ethnic group were 3,100,000 Jews; 2,000,000 ethnic Poles; 500,000 Ukrainians and Belarusians.[260]
  • Total losses by geographic area were about 4.4 million in present-day Poland and about 1.6 million in the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union.[502][503] Polish historian Krystyna Kersten estimated losses of about 2.0 million in the Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union.[181] Contemporary Russian sources also include Poland's losses in the annexed territories with Soviet war deaths.[504]
  • The official Polish government report on war damages prepared in 1947 listed 6,028,000 war victims during the German occupation (including 123,178 military deaths, 2.8 million Poles and 3.2 million Jews), out of a population of 27,007,000 ethnic Poles and Jews; this report excluded ethnic Ukrainian and Belarusian losses. Losses were calculated for the territory of Poland in 1939, including the territories annexed by the USSR.[505] The figure of 6.0 million war dead has been disputed by Polish scholars since the fall of communism who now put the total actual losses at about 3.0 million Jews and 2.0 million ethnic Poles, not including other ethnic groups (Ukrainians and Belarusians). They maintain that the official statistics include those persons who were missing and presumed dead, but actually remained abroad in the West and the USSR after the war.[501][506]

Polish losses during the Soviet occupation (1939–1941)

  • In August 2009, Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota of the Polish Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) estimated that 150,000 Polish citizens were killed due to Soviet repression. Since the collapse of the USSR, Polish scholars have been able to do research in the Soviet archives on Polish losses during the Soviet occupation.[495]
  • In his 2009 book, Andrzej Leon Sowa of the Jagiellonian University states that about 325,000 Polish citizens were deported by the Soviets in 1940–41. The number of the deaths for which the Soviets are responsible "probably did not exceed 100,000", and the same applies to the killings perpetrated by Ukrainian nationalists.[497]
  • Andrzej Paczkowski puts the number of Polish deaths at 90,000–100,000 of the 1.0 million persons deported and 30,000 executed by the Soviets.[259]
  • In 2005 Tadeusz Piotrowski estimated the death toll in Soviet hands at 350,000.[507]
  • An earlier estimate made in 1987 by Franciszek Proch of the Polish Association of Former Political Prisoners of Nazi and Soviet Concentration Camps estimated the total dead due to the Soviet occupation at 1,050,000.[508]

Polish military casualties

^AT  Timor

  • Officially neutral, East Timor was occupied by Japan during 1942–45. Allied commandos initiated a guerrilla resistance campaign and most deaths were caused by Japanese reprisals against the civilian population. The Australian Dept. of Defence estimated the civilian death toll at 40,000 to 70,000.[109] However, another source puts the death toll at 40,000 to 50,000.[515]

^AU  Romania

  • Demographer Boris Urlanis estimated Romanian war dead at 300,000 military and 200,000 civilians.[516]
  • Total Romanian military war dead were approximately 300,000. Total killed were 93,326 (72,291 with Axis and 21,035 with Allies). Total missing and POW were 341,765 (283,322 with Axis and 58,443 with Allies), only about 80,000 survived Soviet captivity.[517]
  • Civilian losses included 160,000 Jewish Holocaust dead,[195] the genocide of Roma people 36,000 and 7,693 civilians killed in Allied air raids on Romania.[518]

^AV  Ruanda Urundi

  • The Ruzagayura famine from October 1943 to December 1944 was due to a local drought and the harsh wartime policies of the Belgian colonial administration to increase food production for the war effort in the Congo. By the time the famine ended between 36,000[112] and 50,000[113] people died of hunger in the territory. Several hundred thousand people also emigrated away from Ruanda-Urundi, most to the Belgian Congo but also to British Uganda.[519][520]
  • As Ruanda [Rwanda] was not occupied nor its food supply cut off, these deaths are not usually included with World War II casualties. However, at least one historian has compared the 1943 famine there to the Bengal famine of 1943, which is attributed to war.[521]

^AW  South Africa

^AX  South Seas Mandate

  • This territory includes areas now known as the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
  • Micronesian war related civilian deaths were caused by American bombing and shellfire; and malnutrition caused by the U.S. blockade of the islands. In addition the civilian population was conscripted by the Japanese as forced laborers and were subjected to numerous mindless atrocities.[523]
  • John W. Dower put Japanese civilian dead in Battle of Saipan at 10,000.[464]
  • ^AY  Soviet Union

The following notes summarize Soviet casualties, the details are presented in World War II casualties of the Soviet Union.

  • A 1993 report published by the Russian Academy of Science estimated the total Soviet losses in World War II at 26.6 million[4][524][525] The Russian Ministry of Defense in 1993 put total military dead and missing in 1941–45 at 8,668,400[310][526] These figures have generally been accepted by historians in the west.[527][528][529] The total population loss of 26.6 million is an estimate based on a demographic study, it is not an exact accounting of the war dead.[530] The figures of 26.6 million total war dead and 8.668 million military dead are cited by the Russian government for the losses in the war.[531]
  • Military war dead The figures for Soviet military war dead and missing are disputed. The official report on the military casualties was prepared by Grigori F. Krivosheev[532][533] According to Krivosheev, the losses of the Red Army and Navy combat forces in the field were 8,668,400 including 5,226,800 killed in action,[309] 555,500 non-combat deaths,[309] 1,102,800 died of wounds[309] 500,000 missing in action.[309]
    The remaining balance includes 1,103,000 POW dead and 180,000 POWs who remained in western countries at the end of the war. Krivosheev maintains that the higher figure of 3.3 million POW dead cited in western sources is based on German figures and analysis.[534][535] Krivosheev maintains that these statistics are not correct because they include reservists not on active strength, civilians and military personnel reported missing who were recovered during the course of the war. He maintains that the actual number captured were 4,559,000, he deducted 3,276,000 to arrive at his total of 1.283 million POW irrecoverable losses, his deductions were 500,000 reservists not on actual strength, 939,700 military personnel reported missing who were recovered during the war and 1,836,000 POWs who returned to the Soviet Union at the end of the war.[536]
    Krivosheev's figures are disputed by historians who put the actual losses at between 10.9 and 11.5 million. Critics of Krivosheev maintain that he underestimated the losses of POWs and missing in action and did he did not include the casualties of those convicted. Data published in Russia by Viktor Zemskov put Soviet POW losses at 2,543,000 (5,734,000 were captured, 821,000 released into German service and 2,371,000 liberated).[537] Zemskov estimated the total military war dead were 11.5 million, including POW dead of 2.3 million and 1.5 million missing in action.[538] S. N. Mikhalev estimated total military irrecoverable losses at 10.922 million.[539] A recent study by Christian Hartmann put Soviet military dead at 11.4 million.[540] Additional losses not included by Krivosheev were 267,300 who died of sickness in hospital,[541] 135,000 convicts executed,[542] and 422,700 convicts sent to penal units at the front.[542]
    S. N. Mikhalev estimated total military demographic losses at 13.7 million.[539] S. A. Il'enkov, an official of the Central Archives of the Russian Ministry of Defense, maintained, "We established the number of irreplaceable losses of our Armed Forces at the time of the Great Patriotic War of about 13,850,000."[543] Il'enkov and Mikhalev maintained that the field unit reports did not include deaths in rear area hospitals of wounded personnel and personnel captured in the early months of the war. Additional demographic losses to the Soviet military were those imprisoned for desertion after the war and deserters in German military service. According to Krivosheev, the losses of deserters in German service were 215,000.[374] He listed 436,600 convicts who were imprisoned.[314]
  • Civilian war dead The Russian government puts the civilian death toll due to the war at 13,684,000 (7,420,000 killed, 2,164,000 forced labor deaths in Germany and 4,100,000 deaths due to famine and disease).[544][545] A Russian academic study estimated an additional 2.5 to 3.2 million civilian dead due to famine and disease in Soviet territory not occupied by the Germans.[546] Statistics published in Russia list civilian war losses of 6,074,857 civilians killed reported by the Extraordinary State Commission in 1946,[547] 641,803 famine deaths during the siege of Leningrad according to official figures,[547] 58,000 killed in bombing raids (40,000 Stalingrad,17,000 Leningrad and 1,000 Moscow),[548] and an additional 645,000 civilian reservists that were killed or captured are also included with civilian casualties. The statistic of forced labor deaths in Germany of 2.164 million includes the balance of POW'S and those convicted not included in Krivosheev's figures. In addition to these losses, a Russian demographic study of the wartime population indicated an increase of 1.3 million in infant mortality caused by the war and that 9–10 million of the 26.6 million total Soviet war dead were due to the worsening of living conditions in the USSR, including the region that was not occupied.[549] The number deaths in the siege of Leningrad have been disputed. According to David Glantz, the 1945 Soviet estimate presented at the Nuremberg Trials was 642,000 civilian deaths. He noted that Soviet era source from 1965 put the number of dead in the Siege of Leningrad at "greater than 800,000" and that a Russian source from 2000 put the number of dead at 1,000,000.[550] These casualties are for 1941–1945 within the 1946–1991 borders of the USSR.[551] Included with civilian losses are deaths in the territories annexed by the USSR in 1939–1940 including 600,000 in the Baltic states[552] and 1,500,000 in Eastern Poland.[553] Russian sources include Jewish Holocaust deaths among total civilian dead. Gilbert put Jewish losses at one million within 1939 borders; Holocaust deaths in the annexed territories numbered an additional 1.5 million, bringing total Jewish losses to 2.5 million.[554]
  • Alternative viewpoints According to the Russian demographer Dr. L.L. Rybakovsky, there are a wide range of estimates for total war dead by Russian scholars. He cites figures of total war dead that range from 21.8 million up to 28.0 million. Rybakovsky points out that the variables that are used to compute losses are by no means certain and are currently disputed by historians in Russia.[555] Viktor Zemskov put the total war dead at 20 million, he maintained that the official figure of 26.6 million includes about 7 million deaths due to natural causes based on the mortality rate that prevailed before the war. He put military dead at 11.5 million, 4.5 million civilians killed and 4.0 due to famine and disease.[126] Some Russian historians put the figure as high as 46.0 million by counting the population deficit due to children not born. Based on the birth rate prior to the war there is a population shortfall of about 20 million births during the war. The figures for the number of children born during the war and natural deaths are rough estimates because of a lack of vital statistics.[555]
  • There were additional casualties in 1939–40, which totaled 136,945: Battle of Khalkhin Gol in 1939 (8,931), Invasion of Poland of 1939 (1,139), and the Winter War with Finland in 1939–40 (126,875).[556] The names of many Soviet war dead are presented in the OBD Memorial database online.[557]

^AZ  Spain

  • There were 4,500 military deaths with the all Spanish Blue Division serving with the German Army in the U.S.S.R. The unit was withdrawn by Spain in 1943.[558]
  • R.J. Rummel estimates the deaths of 20,000 anti-Fascist Spanish refugees resident in France who were deported to Nazi camps, these deaths are included with French civilian casualties.[202]

^BA  Sweden

  • During the Winter war of 1939–40 the Swedish Volunteer Corps served with the Finnish Armed Forces and lost 28 men in combat.[139]
  • 33 Swedish sailors were killed when submarine HMS Ulven was sunk by a German mine on April 16, 1943.
  • During the war, Swedish merchant shipping was attacked by both German and Soviet submarines; 2,000 merchant seamen were killed.[559]

^BB  Switzerland

^BC  Thailand

^BD  Turkey

  • The Refah tragedy (Turkish: Refah faciası) refers to a maritime disaster during World War II, when the cargo steamer Refah of neutral Turkey, carrying Turkish military personnel from Mersin in Turkey to Port Said, Egypt was sunk in eastern Mediterranean waters by a torpedo fired from an unidentified submarine. Of the 200 passengers and crew aboard, only 32 survived.[143]

^BE  United Kingdom and Colonies

  • The Commonwealth War Graves Commission reported a total of 383,758 military dead from all causes for both the UK and non-dominion British colonies, not including India which was reported separately; figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials. These figures include deaths that occurred after the war up until 31 December 1947.[565]
  • The Commonwealth War Graves Commission also maintains a Roll of Honour of those civilians under Crown Protection (including foreign nationals) who died as a result of enemy actions in the Second World War. The names of 67,170 are commemorated in the Civilian War Dead Roll of Honour.[566]
  • Modern updates of UK casualties including the wounded are contained in French, David (2000). Raising Churchill's Army: The British Army and the War against Germany 1919–1945. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924630-4. online Archived 2020-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • The official UK report on war casualties of June 1946 provided a summary of the UK war losses, excluding colonies. This report (HMSO 6832) listed:[291][292]

         Total war dead of 357,116; Navy (50,758); Army (144,079); Air Force (69,606); Women's Auxiliary Territorial Service (624);
         Merchant Navy (30,248); British Home Guard (1,206) and Civilians (60,595).
         The total still missing on 2/28/1946 were 6,244; Navy (340); Army (2,267); Air Force (3,089); Women's Auxiliary Territorial Service (18);
         Merchant Navy (530); British Home Guard (0) and Civilians (0).
         These figures included the losses of Newfoundland and Southern Rhodesia.
         Colonial forces are not included in these figures.
         There were an additional 31,271 military deaths due to "natural causes" which are not included in these figures.
         Deaths due to air and V-rocket attacks were 60,595 civilians and 1,206 British Home Guard.

  • The preliminary 1945 data for UK colonial forces was killed 6,877, missing 14,208, wounded 6,972 and POW 8,115.[319]
  • UK casualties include losses of the colonial forces.[567] UK colonial forces included units from East Africa, West Africa, Ghana, the Caribbean, Malaya, Burma, Hong Kong, Jordan, Sudan, Malta and the Jewish Brigade. The Cyprus Regiment made up of volunteers that fought with the UK Army, and suffered about 358 killed and 250 missing.[568] Gurkhas recruited from Nepal fought with the British Army during the Second World War. Included with UK casualties are citizens of the various European countries occupied by Germany. There were separate RAF squadrons with citizens from Poland (17); Czechoslovakia (5); Netherlands (1); Free French (7); Yugoslavia (2); Belgium (3); Greece (3); Norway (2). Volunteers from the United States served in 3 RAF squadrons known as the Eagle Squadrons. Many foreign nationals and persons from the British colonies served in the UK Merchant Navy.[569]

^BF  United States
American military dead#^BF1

  • Total U.S. military deaths in battle and from other causes were 407,316. The breakout by service is as follows: Army 318,274 (234,874 battle, 83,400 nonbattle),[293] Navy 62,614,[293] Marine Corps 24,511,[293] and the Coast Guard 1,917.[570][322]
  • Deaths in battle were 292,131. The breakout by service is as follows: Army 234,874,[293] Navy 36,950,[293] Marine Corps 19,733,[293] and Coast Guard 574. These losses were incurred during the period 12/8/41 until 12/31/46.[89][570]
  • During the period of America's neutrality in World War II (September 1, 1939 – December 8, 1941), U.S. military losses including 126 killed in October 1941 when the USS Kearny and the USS Reuben James were attacked by U-boats, as well as 2,335 killed during the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by Japanese air forces on December 7, 1941.[571]
  • The United States Army Air Forces losses, which are included in the Army total, were 52,173 deaths due to combat and 35,946 from non-combat causes.[294]
  • U.S. Battle Deaths by Theater of war (inluding 10,957 Army prisoners who died in captivity): Europe–Atlantic 185,179 (Army 177,549 including 36,461 from Army Air Forces, Navy/Coast Guard 7,225, Marine Corps 405); Asia–Pacific 107,903 (Army 57,286 including 15,694 from Army Air Forces, Navy/Coast Guard 31,032, Marine Corps 19,585); unidentified theaters 39 (Army).[294][322][321] The details of U.S. military casualties are listed online: the U.S. Army,[294] the U.S. Navy, and the U.S. Marine Corps.[572]
  • Of 34,648 U.S. Prisoners taken by Japan 12,935 died; of 95,532 captured in the European Theater of War, 1,124 died.[322]
  • U.S. Army figures include the deaths of 5,337 from the Philippines and 165 from Puerto Rico (see p. 118).[294]
  • The names of individual U.S. military personnel killed in World War II can be found at the U.S. National Archives.[573]
  • American Battle Monuments Commission website lists the names of military and civilian war dead from World War II buried in ABMC cemeteries or listed on Walls of the Missing.[574]

American civilian dead #^BF2

  • According to the Usmm.org, 9,521 merchant mariners lost their lives in the war (8,421 killed and 1,100 who later died of wounds). In 1950, the United States Coast Guard put U.S. Merchant Marine losses at 5,662 (845 due to enemy action, 37 in prison camps, and 4,780 missing), excluding U.S. Army transports and foreign flagged ships and they did not break out losses between the Atlantic and Pacific theaters.[575][576][577]
  • The names of U.S. Merchant Mariners killed in World War II are listed by USMM.org.[575][578]
  • The Civil Air Patrol assumed many missions including anti-submarine patrol and warfare, border patrols, and courier services. During World War II CAP's coastal patrol had flown 24 million miles, found 173 enemy U-boats, attacked 57, hit 10 and sunk 2, dropping a total of 83 bombs and depth charges throughout the conflict.[citation needed] By the end of the war, 64 CAP members had lost their lives in the line of duty.[579]
  • According to U.S. War Department figures, 18,745 American civilians were interned in the war (13,996 in the Far East and 4,749 in Europe). A total of 2,419 American civilian internees were listed as dead and missing. Under Japanese internment, 992 died and another 544 were listed as "unknown"; under German internment, 168 died and a further 715 were listed as "unknown".[303][580][581]
  • 68 U.S. civilians were killed during the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.[582]
  • The official U.S. report listed 1 U.S. civilian killed during the Battle of Guam on December 8–10.[439] However, another source reported 13 "civilians" killed during the battle[583] and 70 U.S. civilians were killed during the Battle of Wake Island from December 8–23, 1941.[582] 98 U.S. civilian POWs were massacred by the Japanese on Wake Island in October 1943.
  • During Japan's Aleutian Islands Campaign in Alaska in June 1942, a U.S. civilian was killed during the bombing of Dutch Harbor. The Japanese invaded the island of Attu, killing a white U.S. civilian and interned 45 Alaska Native Aleuts in Japan, in which 19 died during the rest of the war.[584]
  • Six U.S. civilians were killed in Oregon in May 1945 by Japanese balloon bombs.[585]

^BG  Yugoslavia

  • The official Yugoslav figure for total war dead is 1.7 million (300,000 military and 1,400,000 civilians). This figure is cited in reference works dealing with World War II.[149][586][587] Studies in Yugoslavia by Franjo Tudjman and Ivo Lah put losses at 2.1 million[588] However, the official Yugoslav figure has been disputed studies by Vladimir Žerjavić and Bogoljub Kočović who put actual losses at about 1.0 million persons.[589][590][591][592] The calculation of Yugoslav losses is not an exact accounting listing of the dead, but is based on demographic calculations of the population balance which estimate births during the war and natural deaths. The number of persons who emigrated after the war (ethnic Germans, Hungarians, Italians and Yugoslav refugees to the west) are rough estimates.[589][590][592]
  • The U.S. Bureau of the Census published a report in 1954 that concluded that Yugoslav war-related deaths were 1,067,000. The U.S. Bureau of the Census noted that the official Yugoslav government figure of 1.7 million war dead was overstated because it "was released soon after the war and was estimated without the benefit of a postwar census".[590]
  • A recent study by Vladimir Žerjavić estimates total war related deaths at 1,027,000, which included losses of 237,000 Yugoslav partisans and 209,000 "Quislings and collaborators" (see discussion below losses of Yugoslav collaborators)[593] Civilian dead of 581,000 included 57,000 Jews. Losses by each Yugoslav republic were: Bosnia 316,000; Serbia 273,000; Croatia 271,000; Slovenia 33,000; Montenegro 27,000; Macedonia 17,000; and killed abroad 80,000.[589]
  • Bogoljub Kočović, a Yugoslav statistician, calculated the actual war losses at 1,014,000.[592]
  • Jozo Tomasevich, Professor Emeritus of Economics at San Francisco State University, stated that the calculations of Kočović and Žerjavić "seem to be free of bias, we can accept them as reliable".[594]

The losses of Yugoslav collaborators

  • Croatian emigres in the west made exaggerated allegations that 500,000–600,000 Croatians and Chetniks were massacred by the Partisans after the war; these claims are cited by Rudolph Rummel in his study Statistics of Democide.[595]Jozo Tomasevich noted that the figures of the number of collaborators killed by the Partisans are disputed. According to Tomasevich some Croatian exiles "have been more moderate in their estimates", putting the death toll at "about 200,000".[596] Regarding the death toll in the reprisals by the Yugoslav partisans Tomasevich believed that "It is impossible to establish the exact number of victims in these operations, although fairly accurate figures could probably be reached after much additional unbiased research".[597]

The reasons for the high human toll in Yugoslavia were as follows A. Military operations between the occupying German military forces and their "Quislings and collaborators" against the Yugoslav resistance.[150]
B. German forces, under express orders from Hitler, fought with a special vengeance against the Serbs, who were considered Untermensch.[150] One of the worst one-day massacres during the German military occupation of Serbia was the Kragujevac massacre.
C. Deliberate acts of reprisal against target populations were perpetrated by all combatants. All sides practiced the shooting of hostages on a large scale. At the end of the war, many Ustaše and Slovene collaborators were killed in or as a result of the Yugoslav death march of Nazi collaborators.[150]
D. The systematic extermination of large numbers of people for political, religious or racial reasons. The most numerous victims were Serbs.[150] According to Yad Vashem, "During their four years in power, the Ustasa carried out a Serb genocide, exterminating over 500,000, expelling 250,000 and forcing another 200,000 to convert to Catholicism. The Ustasa also killed most of Croatia's Jews, 20,000 Gypsies, and many thousands of their political enemies."[598] According to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum "The Croat authorities murdered between 320,000 and 340,000 ethnic Serb residents of Croatia and Bosnia during the period of Ustaša rule; more than 30,000 Croatian Jews were killed either in Croatia or at Auschwitz-Birkenau". [599] The USHMM reports between 77,000 and 99,000 persons were killed at the Jasenovac and Stara Gradiška concentration camps.[600] The Jasenovac Memorial Site quotes a similar figure of between 80,000 and 100,000 victims. Stara Gradiška was a sub-camp of Jasenovac established for women and children.[601] The names and data for 12,790 victims at Stara Gradiška have been established.[602] Serbian sources currently claim that 700,000 persons were murdered at Jasenovac.[601]
Some 40,000 Roma were murdered.[603] Jewish victims in Yugoslavia totaled 67,122.[604]
E. Reduced food supply caused famine and disease.[150]
F. Allied bombing of German supply lines caused civilian casualties. The hardest hit localities were Podgorica, Leskovac, Zadar and Belgrade.[150]
G. The demographic losses due to the reduction of 335,000 births and emigration of about 660,000 are not included with war casualties.[150]

^BH Other Nations

  • Dominican Republic had 27 Merchant Mariners killed.[605]

References

  1. ^ "International Programs – Historical Estimates of World Population – U.S. Census Bureau". 2013-03-06. Archived from the original on 2013-03-06. Retrieved 2020-03-28.
  2. ^ a b Geoffrey A. Hosking (2006). "Rulers and victims: the Russians in the Soviet Union". Harvard University Press. p. 242; ISBN 0-674-02178-9
  3. ^ a b Michael Ellman and S. Maksudov, Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War: a note – World War II – Europe Asia Studies, July 1994.
  4. ^ a b c Andreev EM; Darsky LE; Kharkova TL, Population dynamics: consequences of regular and irregular changes. in Demographic Trends and Patterns in the Soviet Union Before 1991. Routledge. 1993; ISBN 0415101948
  5. ^ Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei. Sankt-Peterburg 1995; ISBN 5-86789-023-6, pp. 124–31 (these losses are for the territory of the USSR in the borders of 1946–1991, including territories annexed in 1939–40).
  6. ^ Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), Warsaw, 2009; ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6
  7. ^ Overmans, Rüdiger (2000). Deutsche militärische Verluste im Zweiten Weltkrieg (in German). Oldenbourg. p. Bd. 46. ISBN 3-486-56531-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Overmans 2000, p. 228.
  9. ^ Pauwels, Jacques (2015). The Myth of the Good War (Revista ed.). Toronto: James Laurimer & Company. p. 73. ISBN 978-1459408722.
  10. ^ a b China's Anti-Japanese War Combat Operations. Guo Rugui, editor-in-chief Huang Yuzhang Jiangsu People's Publishing House, 2005; ISBN 7-214-03034-9, pp. 4–9.
  11. ^ a b Ishikida, Miki (July 13, 2005). Toward Peace: War Responsibility, Postwar Compensation, and Peace Movements and Education in Japan. iUniverse, Inc. p. 30. ISBN 978-0595350636. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  12. ^ Archived copy Archived May 16, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "The Great Vietnamese Famine of 1944-45 Revisited1944−45".
  14. ^ a b c Pierre van der Eng (2008). "Food Supply in Java during War and Decolonisation, 1940–1950". Munich Personal RePEc Archive | No. 8852. pp. 35–38.
  15. ^ a b John W. Dower. War Without Mercy 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 296 (300,000 forced laborers)
  16. ^ a b c d e Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945 Transaction 2007 ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8, pp. 143–44
  17. ^ "Source List and Detailed Death Tolls for the Twentieth Century Hemoclysm". Users.erols.com. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  18. ^ I. C. B. Dear and M. R. D. Foot Oxford Companion to World War II Oxford, 2005; ISBN 0-19-280670-X, p. 290
  19. ^ John W. Dower War Without Mercy (1986); ISBN 0-394-75172-8
  20. ^ a b R.J. Rummel. China's Bloody Century. Transaction 1991; ISBN 0-88738-417-X
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw "Population Statistics". Library.uu.nl. Archived from the original on 2012-03-26. Retrieved 2015-06-07.
  22. ^ a b Albania: a country study Federal Research Division, Library of Congress; edited by Raymond E. Zickel and Walter R. Iwaskiw. 2nd ed. 1994. ISBN 0-8444-0792-5. Available online at Federal Research Division of the U.S. Library of Congress. See section "On The Communist Takeover". Library of Congress Country Study
  23. ^ a b "Deaths as a result of service with Australian units (AWM) web page". AWM. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
  24. ^ "Australian Military Statistics World War II – A Global Perspective". AWM. Archived from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Clodfelter, Micheal (2002). Warfare and Armed Conflicts – A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures, 1500–2000 (2nd ed.). McFarland & Co. p. 582. ISBN 0-7864-1204-6.
  26. ^ a b Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951.p.44-45
  27. ^ a b c d e f g Clodfelter 2002, p. 540.
  28. ^ a b Clodfelter 2002, p. 512.
  29. ^ a b c d e Clodfelter 2002, p. 556.
  30. ^ McLynn, The Burma Campaign: Disaster into Triumph, 1942–1945, pg. 1.
  31. ^ a b "Canadian War Museum". Warmuseum.ca. Retrieved 2015-06-29.
  32. ^ "Canadian War Museum". Warmuseum.ca. Retrieved 2015-06-29. 1,600 in Merchant Navy
  33. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 412.
  34. ^ Ho Ping-ti. Studies on the Population of China, 1368–1953. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1959.
  35. ^ a b R. J. Rummel. China's Bloody Century. Transaction 1991 ISBN 0-88738-417-X. Table 5A
  36. ^ a b Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945 Transaction 2007 ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8 p. 85
  37. ^ a b c Ho Ping-ti. Studies on the Population of China, 1368–1953. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1959. p. 252
  38. ^ a b Waller Wynne, Population of Czechoslovakia. (International Population Statistics Reports series P-90, No. 3). U.S. Dept. of Commerce) Washington 1953. p. 43 – The U.S. Commerce Dept. Census Bureau cited the following source for the population at 1/1/1939 for Czechoslovakia, State Statistical Office, Statistical Bulletin of Czechoslovakia, v. II (1947) no. 4, Prague p. 57
  39. ^ a b c d Erlikman, Vadim (2004). Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke: spravochnik Потери народонаселения в XX веке: справочник (in Russian). Moscow: Russkaia panorama. p. 54. ISBN 5-93165-107-1.
  40. ^ a b c d e f Urlanis, Boris (1971). Wars and Population. Moscow Page 294
  41. ^ a b "Hvor mange dræbte danskere?". Danish Ministry of Education. 2005-03-11. Archived from the original on 2019-07-25. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  42. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 557, 2,500 killed in 1942 campaign
  43. ^ Van Waterford. Prisoners of the Japanese in World War II, McFarland & Company, 1994; ISBN 0899508936, p. 144 (8,500 Dutch POW deaths)
  44. ^ a b c Dower, John W. (1986). War Without Mercy. Knopf Doubleday Publishing. pp. 295–96. ISBN 0-394-75172-8.
  45. ^ Heike Liebau et al., World in World Wars: Experiences, Perceptions, and Perspectives from Africa and Asia. Studies in Global Social History, 2010), p. 227.
  46. ^ Estonian State Commission on Examination of Policies of Repression;The White Book: Losses inflicted on the Estonian nation by occupation regimes. 1940–1991 Tallinn 2005. ISBN 9985-70-195-X, p. 38, Table 2 (24,000 mobolized by USSR and 10,000 with Germans)
  47. ^ a b c Estonian State Commission on Examination of Policies of Repression;The White Book: Losses inflicted on the Estonian nation by occupation regimes. 1940–1991 Tallinn 2005. ISBN 9985-70-195-X, p. 38, Table 2
  48. ^ a b c Clodfelter 2002, p. 491.
  49. ^ a b "Finnish National Archives". Kronos.narc.fi. Archived from the original on April 20, 2021. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  50. ^ a b c d Tiina Kinnunen, Ville Kivimäki. Finland in World War II: History, Memory, Interpretations, BRILL 2011. ISBN 978-90-04-20894-0 pp. 172
  51. ^ a b c d e f g Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. pp. 58–59
  52. ^ a b Gunn, Geoffrey (2011) "The Great Vietnamese Famine of 1944–45 Revisited", The Asia-Pacific Journal, 9(5), no 4, January 31, 2011. http://www.japanfocus.org/-Geoffrey-Gunn/3483
  53. ^ a b c d e Marschalck, Peter. Bevölkerungsgeschichte Deutschlands im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, Suhrkamp 1984 p.149
  54. ^ a b c d The Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960, p. 78
  55. ^ a b c d e f g h i Overmans 2000, pp. 228–232.
  56. ^ a b c d "Council for Reparations from Germany, Black Book of the Occupation (in Greek and German), Athens 2006, p. 126" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 31, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  57. ^ a b Baranowski, Shelley (2010). Nazi Empire: German colonialism and imperialism from Bismarck to Hitler. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 273; ISBN 978-0-521-67408-9.
  58. ^ a b "ASSESSING THE GUAM WAR CLAIMS PROCESS, COMMITTEE ON ARMED SERVICES U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Dec. 12, 2009". Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  59. ^ a b c Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945, Transaction 2007; ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8, p. 102
  60. ^ a b Támas Stark. Hungary's Human Losses in World War II. Uppsala Univ. 1995 ISBN 91-86624-21-0 p.33
  61. ^ a b c d Támas Stark. Hungary's Human Losses in World War II. Uppsala Univ. 1995 ISBN 91-86624-21-0 p.59
  62. ^ a b "Hve margir Íslendingar dóu í seinni heimsstyrjöldinni?". Visindavefur.hi.is. 2005-06-14. Retrieved 2015-06-23.
  63. ^ a b c d e "Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2014-2015 p. 38". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 24 May 2016.Figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials
  64. ^ a b Ó Gráda, Cormac (2007). "Making Famine History". Journal of Economic Literature (Submitted manuscript). 45 (1): 5–38. doi:10.1257/jel.45.1.5. hdl:10197/492. JSTOR 27646746. S2CID 54763671. – p. 19
  65. ^ Devereux, Stephen (2000). Famine in the twentieth century (PDF) (Report). Brighton: Institute of Development Studies. p. 6. IDS Working Paper 105. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-05-16.
  66. ^ a b Clodfelter 2002, p. 498.
  67. ^ a b "Farhud". U.S. Holocaust Museum. Retrieved 2011-07-30.
  68. ^ "In service to their country: Moving tales of Irishmen who fought in WWII". irishexaminer.com. 2015-08-28. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  69. ^ a b "Bombing Incidents in Ireland during the Emergency 1939–1945". Csn.ul.ie. Archived from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  70. ^ the Ufficio dell'Albo d'Oro of the Italian Ministry of Defence Archived 2020-08-02 at the Wayback Machine.
  71. ^ (Rovighi, Alberto (1988), Le Operazioni in Africa Orientale: (giugno 1940 – novembre 1941)
  72. ^ (USSME, La prima offensiva Britannica in Africa Settentrionale, tomo I, allegato 32 (page 375))
  73. ^ Roma:Instituto Centrale Statistica. Morti E Dispersi Per Cause Belliche Negli Anni 1940–45, Rome, 1957
  74. ^ Ufficio Storico dello Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito
  75. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, pp. 297–99 (includes 1,740,995 dead 1937–45 and 380,000 surrendered Japanese who were unaccounted for after the war)
  76. ^ Ishikida, Miki (2005). Toward Peace: War Responsibility, Postwar Compensation, and Peace Movements and Education in Japan. Universe, Inc. (July 13, 2005). p. 30. (figures of Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare)
  77. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986 ISBN 0-394-75172-8, pp. 297–99 (including air raid dead and Japanese civilians killed on Siapan and Okinawa,)
  78. ^ Ishikida, Miki (2005). Toward Peace: War Responsibility, Postwar Compensation, and Peace Movements and Education in Japan. iUniverse, Inc. (July 13, 2005). p. 30 (500,000 civilians in Japan and 300,000 overseas, figures of Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare)
  79. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 299 (According to Dower, Japanese war dead are "at least 2.5 million")
  80. ^ Ishikida, Miki (2005). Toward Peace: War Responsibility, Postwar Compensation, and Peace Movements and Education in Japan. Universe, Inc. (July 13, 2005). p. 30 (figures of Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare)
  81. ^ R. J. Rumell, Statistics of democide Table 3.1
  82. ^ Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945 Transaction 2007; ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8, p. 19
  83. ^ Erlikman 2004, p. 28, footnotes 6–7Killed: 10,000 with Soviets and 15,000 with Germans; 3,000 POW deaths,2,000 partisans
  84. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, p. 28.
  85. ^ Erlikman 2004, p. 29, footnotes 5–6Killed: 15,000 with Soviets and 5,000 with Germans. POW deaths 4,000, 1,000 partisans
  86. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, p. 29.
  87. ^ a b c d Michel Pauly : Geschichte Luxemburgs, 2013, ISBN 978-3-406-62225-0 p.102
  88. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, (1986); ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 296
  89. ^ a b c Clodfelter 2002, p. 492.
  90. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, p. 74.
  91. ^ a b "United States State Department Background notes Nauru". State.gov. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  92. ^ a b c d "Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) Netherlands" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 2, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  93. ^ "The loss of Dutch lives (in numbers)". www.niod.nl. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  94. ^ a b Higgins, Jenny (2007). "Newfoundlanders and Labradorians in WWII". Heritage Newfoundland & Labrador. Retrieved 2017-02-23.
  95. ^ a b "Sinking of the Caribou". www.heritage.nf.ca.
  96. ^ a b "Auckland War Museum, World War Two Hall of Memories". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  97. ^ a b c d e Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. pp. 112–14
  98. ^ a b Bjij, V. Lal and Kate Fortune. The Pacific Islands – An Encyclopedia, p. 244
  99. ^ "Census of Population and Housing". Archived from the original on 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
  100. ^ a b Clodfelter 2002, p. 566.
  101. ^ a b "Research Starters: Worldwide Deaths in World War II". New Orleans, United States: The National WWII Museum. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  102. ^ a b Anne Sharp Wells (28 September 2009). The A to Z of World War II: The War Against Japan. Scarecrow Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-8108-7026-0.
  103. ^ a b "AJR-27 War crimes: Japanese military during World War II". California Legislative Information. State of California. 26 August 1999. Retrieved 23 July 2019. WHEREAS, At the February 1945 "Battle of Manila," 100,000 men, women, and children were killed by Japanese armed forces in inhumane ways, adding to a total death toll that may have exceeded one million Filipinos during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines, which began in December 1941 and ended in August 1945;
  104. ^ Clodfelter 2017, p. 512.
  105. ^ U.S. Bureau of the Census The Population of Poland Ed. W. Parker Mauldin, Washington, D.C., 1954 p. 103 (population on 1/1/1939)
  106. ^ Gniazdowski, Mateusz. Losses Inflicted on Poland by Germany during World War II. Assessments and Estimates—an Outline The Polish Quarterly of International Affairs, 2007, (140,000 Regular forces and 100,000 resistance fighters)
  107. ^ a b Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami. Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) Warszawa 2009 ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6, p. 9
  108. ^ a b Czes?aw ?uczak Polska i Polacy w drugiej wojnie ?wiatowej (Poland and Poles in the Second World War), Stycze? 1993; ISBN 83-232-0511-6, p. 683
  109. ^ a b c "Department of Defence (Australia), 2002, "A Short History of East Timor"". Archived from the original on January 3, 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-03. (accessdate: October 13, 2010.)
  110. ^ Mark Axworthy. Third Axis Fourth Ally. Arms and Armour 1995; ISBN 1-85409-267-7, p. 216
  111. ^ League of Nations Yearbook 1942 p.14
  112. ^ a b Belgian 1946 estimate, cited in Singiza, Dantès (2011). La Famine Ruzagayura (Rwanda, 1943–1944): causes, Conséquences et réactions des autorités (PDF). Teveuren: Royal Museum of Central Africa. pp. 92–3.
  113. ^ a b United Nations 1948 estimate, cited in Singiza, Dantès (2011). La Famine Ruzagayura (Rwanda, 1943–1944): causes, Conséquences et réactions des autorités (PDF). Teveuren: Royal Museum of Central Africa. p. 94.
  114. ^ League of Nations Yearbook 1942 p.22
  115. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986 ISBN 0-394-75172-8 p. 29 (10,000 civilian dead on Saipan)
  116. ^ Andreev, EM, et al., Naselenie Sovetskogo Soiuza, 1922–1991. Moscow, Nauka, 1993; ISBN 978-5-02-013479-9, pp. 52–53 (the 1939 population was adjusted by Andreev to reflect the net population transfers in 1939–1945.)
  117. ^ Davies 2005, p. 771939 population 188.8 million (168.5 in pre-war territory and 20.3 in annexed territories)
  118. ^ Andreev EM; Darsky LE; Kharkova TL, Population dynamics: consequences of regular and irregular changes. in Demographic Trends and Patterns in the Soviet Union Before 1991. Routledge. 1993; ISBN 0415101948 p. 429. (1939 population including annexed territories 188.794 million)
  119. ^ G. F. Krivosheyev (1993) "Soviet Armed Forces Losses in Wars, Combat Operations and Military Conflicts: A Statistical Study". Military Publishing House Moscow. (Translated by U.S. government) p. 121 Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  120. ^ Krivosheev 1997, p. 85, . 8,8668,000, including 1,283,000 POW and 500,000 missing.
  121. ^ "Michael Ellman and S. Maksudov, Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War:a note-World War II - Europe Asia Studies, July 1994" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-06-28. (8.668 million including 1.783 million POW and missing)
  122. ^ Hartmann, Christian (2013). Operation Barbarossa: Nazi Germany's War in the East, 1941–1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-19-966078-0. 11.4 million
  123. ^ Ian Dear (1995). Oxford Companion to World War II. Oxford University Press 1995. p. 290. ISBN 978-0198662259. (10 million military dead)
  124. ^ Erlikman 2004, pp. 20–21, 10,600,000, including 2.6 million POW
  125. ^ S. N. Mikhalev, Liudskie poteri v Velikoi Otechestvennoi voine 1941–1945 gg: Statisticheskoe issledovanie, Krasnoiarskii gos. pedagog. universitet, 2000; ISBN 978-5-85981-082-6, pp. 18–21. S. N. Mikhalev, Human Losses in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945: A Statistical Investigation; Krasnoyarsk State Pedagogical University (in Russian) (10.922 million total dead and missing)
  126. ^ a b Zemskov, Viktor. "The extent of human losses USSR in the Great Patriotic War (in Russian)". demoscope.ru # 559-60, July 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  127. ^ Ian Dear (1995). Oxford Companion to World War II. Oxford University Press 1995. pp. 290. ISBN 978-0198662259. (10 million civilian dead)
  128. ^ Erlikman 2004, pp. 20–21, 10,000,000
  129. ^ Evdokimov 1995, pp. 124–2710,242,000 including 7,420,000 killed by intentional acts of violence, 2,164,000 as forced labor for Germany and 658,000 in siege of Leningrad.
  130. ^ Andreev EM; Darsky LE; Kharkova TL, Population dynamics: consequences of regular and irregular changes. in Demographic Trends and Patterns in the Soviet Union Before 1991. Routledge. 1993; ISBN 0415101948 p. 429.
  131. ^ Evdokimov 1995, pp. 127, 1586.6 to 7.1 million deaths due to famine and disease including 4.1 million in German occupied USSR and 2.5 – 3.2 million deaths in area not occupied by Germany
  132. ^ Erlikman 2004, pp. 20–21, 5,500,000 famine and disease deaths plus repression 1.4 million deaths (200,000 executed, 1.2 million deaths in Gulag and Special Settlements)
  133. ^ Zemskov, Viktor. "The extent of human losses USSR in the Great Patriotic War (in Russian)". demoscope.ru # 559-60, July 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2017. Viktor Zemskov maintains that the figure of 27 million total war dead includes about 7 million deaths due to natural causes based on the mortality rate that prevailed before the war
  134. ^ Andreev EM; Darsky LE; Kharkova TL, Population dynamics: consequences of regular and irregular changes. in Demographic Trends and Patterns in the Soviet Union Before 1991. Routledge. 1993. ISBN 0415101948 pp. 434–436 (26.6 million war dead includes a decline in natural deaths of 3.0 million and a 1.3 million increase in infant mortality)
  135. ^ Erlikman 2004, pp. 20–21, 26,500,000
  136. ^ Davies, R. W. (2005) [1994]. "(E) The Second World War, 1939-1945". Economic Transformation of the Soviet Union, 1913–1945. Cambridge University Press. pp. 77–79. ISBN 978-0521457705. Total losses of 26.6 million out of a 1939 population of 188.8 million, which included 20.3 million annexed territories
  137. ^ Michael Haynes, Counting Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War: a Note Europe Asia Studies Vol. 55, No. 2, 2003, 300–309 (26.6 million)
  138. ^ "Michael Ellman and S. Maksudov, Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War:a note-World War II - Europe Asia Studies, July 1994" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-06-28. (26 to 27 million)
  139. ^ a b "Swedish Volunteer Corps". Svenskafrivilliga.com. Retrieved 2011-06-16.
  140. ^ Lennart Lundberg Handelsflottan under andra världskriget p.9
  141. ^ a b Jonathan E. Helmreich (Summer 2000). "The Diplomacy of Apology: U.S. Bombings of Switzerland during World War II". Aerospace Power Journal. Archived from the original on May 5, 2007. Retrieved March 4, 2016 – via Airpower.maxwell.af.mil.
  142. ^ a b Eiji Murashima, "The Commemorative Character of Thai Historiography: The 1942–43 Thai Military Campaign in the Shan States Depicted as a Story of National Salvation and the Restoration of Thai Independence" Modern Asian Studies, v40, n4 (2006) pp. 1053–1096, p1057n:
  143. ^ a b "SS_Refah, Graces Guide". Retrieved 2015-06-23.
  144. ^ Jan Lahmeyer. "The UNITED KINGDOM : country population". www.populstat.info. Archived from the original on 2019-07-22. Retrieved 2019-03-05.
  145. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission (2015-04-12). "Annual Report 2014-2015". issuu. p. 39. Retrieved 2019-03-05.[permanent dead link] Table: "Breakdown of War Dead by Forces". Figures include identified burials as and those commemorated by name on memorials attributed to the United Kingdom.
  146. ^ "Civilian War Dead Roll of Honour 1939 – 1945". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 2019-03-05. In 2017, "several hundred" new names were added which are not part of this statistic.
  147. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission (2014-05-11). "Annual Report 2013-2014". issuu. p. 43. Retrieved 2019-03-05.[permanent dead link] References the War Dead Roll of Honour. Figures include civilians killed in the Battle of Britain, Siege of Malta, and civilians interned by enemy nations. The CWGC list foreign nationals killed by enemy action on British territory among these.
  148. ^ Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. 156
  149. ^ a b c d I. C. B. Dear and M. R. D. Foot Oxford Companion to World War II Oxford, 2005; ISBN 0-19-280670-X, p. 290
  150. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3615-4 In Cap. 17 Alleged and True Population Losses there is a detailed account of the controversies related to Yugoslav war losses (pp. 744–50)
  151. ^ "U.S. Census BureauWorld Population Historical Estimates of World Population". Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  152. ^ a b c d e f g h i Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960 Bonn 1961 p.78 (available online at https://www.digizeitschriften.de/de/openaccess)
  153. ^ a b c d "Bundeskanzleramt der Republik Österreich - Startseite". www.bundeskanzleramt.gv.at. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  154. ^ "Bundeskanzleramt der Republik Österreich – Startseite – Bundeskanzleramt Österreich". www.bundeskanzleramt.gv.at.
  155. ^ File:DR1937.1.png
  156. ^ a b c Richard Overy, The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War Over Europe 1940–1945 (2013) pp. 304–7 (Overy noted that "No doubt this does not include all those who were killed or died of wounds, but it does include uniformed personnel, POWs, and foreign workers, and it applies to the Greater German area". Using the United States Strategic Bombing Survey data Overy calculated an average monthly death toll of 18,777 from September 1944 to January 1945, taking this monthly average he estimated losses of 57,000 from February to April 1945 to which he adds an additional 25,000 killed in Dresden for total deaths of 82,000 from February to April 1945. The figures up until the end of January 1945 of 271,000 and the 82,000 from February to April 1945 give an overall figure of 353,000 air war deaths. Overy summarizes: "Detailed reconstruction of deaths caused by the Royal Air Force bombing from February to May 1945, though incomplete, suggests a total of at least 57,000. If casualties inflicted by the American air forces are assumed to be lower, since their bombing was less clearly aimed at cities, an overall death toll of 82,000 is again statistically realistic. In the absence of unambiguous statistical evidence, the figure of 353,000 gives an approximate scale consistent with the evidence".)
  157. ^ Wirtschaft und Statistik October 1956
  158. ^ Germany reports. With an introd. by Konrad Adenauer. Germany (West). Presse- und Informationsamt. Wiesbaden, Distribution: F. Steiner, 1961, pp. 31–33 (figure includes 170,000 German Jews). The West German government did not list euthanasia victims along with the war dead.
  159. ^ a b c Germany reports. With an introd. by Konrad Adenauer. Germany (West). Presse- und Informationsamt. Wiesbaden, Distribution: F. Steiner, 1961 pp. 31–33 (they give figure of 300,000 German deaths due to racial, religious and political persecution including 170,000 Jews. Figure does not include the Nazi euthanasia program
  160. ^ a b Bundesarchiv Euthanasie" im Nationalsozialismus Archived 2013-10-21 at the Wayback Machine 2003 report by German Federal Archive puts the dead toll in the Nazi euthanasia program at over 200,000
  161. ^ German Federal Archive, Siegel, Silke Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1948. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28. Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewählte Erlebnisberichte. Bonn 1989 P. 41 (100,000 during wartime flight; 200,000 in USSR as forced labor and 100,000 in internment camps)
  162. ^ a b Wirtschaft und Statistik October 1956, Journal published by Statistisches Bundesamt Deutschland. (German government Statistical Office)
  163. ^ Overmans 2000, p. 228, . Overmans uses the German description "Deutsche nach Abstammung" German according to ancestry
  164. ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960 Bonn 1961 p. 79 (available online at http://www.digizeitschriften.de/de/openaccess)
  165. ^ a b German Federal Archive, Siegel, Silke Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1948. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28. Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewählte Erlebnisberichte. Bonn 1989 P. 53 (38,000 during wartime flight; 5,000 in USSR as forced labor and 160,000 in internment camps)
  166. ^ "Digizeitschriften". www.digizeitschriften.de. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  167. ^ a b The Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960, pp. 78–79
  168. ^ Overmans 2000, p. 333.
  169. ^ a b Austria facts and Figures p. 44 The Austrian government estimates 100,000 victims of Nazi persecution including 65,000 Jews.
  170. ^ German Federal Archive, Siegel, Silke Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1948. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28. Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewählte Erlebnisberichte. Bonn 1989 pp. 53–54
  171. ^ Krivosheev, G. F., ed. (1997). Soviet Casualties and Combat Losses in the Twentieth Century. London: Greenhill Books. p. 278. ISBN 1-85367-280-7.
  172. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, pp. 21–35.
  173. ^ a b c Andreev, EM, et al., Naselenie Sovetskogo Soiuza, 1922–1991. Moscow, Nauka, 1993; ISBN 978-5-02-013479-9, p. 118
  174. ^ "НАСЕЛЕНИЕ Советского Союза 1922–1991" (PDF). Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  175. ^ a b Evdokimov 1995, pp. 82–84.
  176. ^ a b Naselenie Rossii v XX Veke: V 3-kh Tomakh: Tom 2. 1940–1959 [The Population of Russia in the 20th century: volume 2]
  177. ^ Zmeskov, Viktor. "Репатриация перемещённых советских граждан (Repatriation of displaced Soviet citizens)". Социологические исследования. 1995. Retrieved 10 May 2017. более чем на 3/4 состояла из «западников» и менее чем на 1/4 — из «восточников»
  178. ^ S. Maksudov Losses Suffered by the Population of the USSR 1918–1958 The Samizdat register II / edited by Roy Medvedev New York : Norton, 1981. pp. 238–240)
  179. ^ Mały Rocznik Statystyczny Polski 1939–1941
  180. ^ Eberhardt, Piotr. "Political Migrations on Polish Territories 1939–1950" (PDF). Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  181. ^ a b c Krystyna Kersten, Szacunek strat osobowych w Polsce Wschodniej. Dzieje Najnowsze Rocznik XXI, 1994 p. 46
  182. ^ Martin Gilbert. Atlas of the Holocaust 1988 ISBN 0-688-12364-3 pp. 242–244
  183. ^ a b c d e Niewyk, Donald L. The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, Columbia University Press, 2000; ISBN 0-231-11200-9, p. 421.
  184. ^ Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) Warszawa 2009; ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6 p. 32
  185. ^ a b c Raul Hilberg, The Destruction of the European Jews New Viewpoints 1973 p. 767.
  186. ^ "Yad Vashem The Shoah Victims' Names Recovery Project".
  187. ^ "Yad Vashem: About the Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names: FAQs".
  188. ^ a b Since the Czech Republic as political entity exists only since 1969/1993, this political name stands for Czech part (Czech lands – during the war divided into so-called Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia and Sudetenland) of then-occupied Czechoslovakia.
  189. ^ "File:Hungary in 1941 with territories annexed in 1938-1941.png". Wikimedia Commons. September 2010. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
  190. ^ a b Martin Gilbert. Atlas of the Holocaust 1988 ISBN 0-688-12364-3 p. 23
  191. ^ "File:TeritorialGainsHungary1920-41.svg". Wikimedia Commons. 2012-04-22. Retrieved 2019-04-12.
  192. ^ a b Martin Gilbert. Atlas of the Holocaust, 1988 ISBN 0-688-12364-3 pp. 184, 244
  193. ^ Raul Hilberg, The Destruction of the European Jews, Franklin Watts 1961, p. 379.
  194. ^ "De vervolging van gemengd-gehuwde joden in Nederland Teruggefloten door Hitler". 4 May 2007. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  195. ^ a b c d Gilbert, Martin (1988). Atlas of the Holocaust. William Morrow. p. 244. ISBN 0-688-12364-3.
  196. ^ Post-war map of Romania
  197. ^ a b Martin Gilbert. Atlas of the Holocaust, 1988; ISBN 0-688-12364-3, p. 244
  198. ^ A Mosaic of Victims: Non-Jews Persecuted and Murdered by the Nazis. Ed. by Michael Berenbaum New York University Press 1990; ISBN 1-85043-251-1
  199. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Holocaust Encyclopedia "Mosaic of Victims: Overview"". Ushmm.org. January 6, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  200. ^ a b Niewyk, Donald L. The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, Columbia University Press, 2000; ISBN 0-231-11200-9 Google Books
  201. ^ "Florida Center for Instructional Technology, College of Education, University of South Florida, A Teachers Guide to the Holocaust". Fcit.usf.edu. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  202. ^ a b c d R. J. Rummel. Democide Nazi Genocide and Mass Murder. Transaction 1992; ISBN 1-56000-004-X, p. 13
  203. ^ Timothy Snyder, Bloodlands, Basic Books 2010, pp. 411–12
  204. ^ Hellmuth Auerbach: Opfer der nationalsozialistischen Gewaltherrschaft. In: Wolfgang Benz (Hg.): Legenden, Lügen, Vorurteile. Ein Wörterbuch zur Zeitgeschichte. Dtv, Neuauflage 1992, ISBN 3-423-04666-X, p, 161.
  205. ^ Dieter Pohl, Verfolgung und Massenmord in der NS-Zeit 1933–1945, WBG (Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft), 2003; ISBN 3534151585, p. 153
  206. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Holocaust Encyclopedia: "Genocide of European Roma, 1939–1945"". Ushmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  207. ^ Hanock, Ian. "Romanies and the Holocaust: A Reevaluation and an Overview" Archived 2013-06-06 at the Wayback Machine Stone, D. (ed.) (2004) The Historiography of the Holocaust. Palgrave, Basingstoke and New York.
  208. ^ Hancock, Ian. Jewish Responses to the Porajmos – The Romani Holocaust Archived 2012-02-14 at the Wayback Machine, Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, University of Minnesota.
  209. ^ Danger! Educated Gypsy, p. 243, University of Hertfordshire Press, 2010
  210. ^ "Documenting Numbers of Victims of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution". encyclopedia.ushmm.org. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  211. ^ Niewyk, Donald L. and Francis Nicosia. The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, Columbia University Press, 2000; ISBN 0-231-11200-9, p. 422.
  212. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Mentally and Physically Handicapped: Victims of the Nazi Era". Archived from the original on July 18, 2012.
  213. ^ Bundesarchiv: Euthanasie-Verbrechen 1939–1945 (Quellen zur Geschichte der "Euthanasie"-Verbrechen 1939–1945 in deutschen und österreichischen Archiven. Ein Inventar. Einführung von Harald Jenner)
  214. ^ Quellen zur Geschichte der "Euthanasie"-Verbrechen 1939–1945 in deutschen und österreichischen Archiven. Ein Inventar [1]
  215. ^ R. J. Rummel. Democide Nazi Genocide and Mass Murder. Transaction 1992 ISBN 1-56000-004-X. Table A
  216. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Holocaust Encyclopedia "Nazi Persecution of Soviet Prisoners of War"". Ushmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  217. ^ "POLISH VICTIMS". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC.
  218. ^ "Polish Resistance and Conclusions". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC.
  219. ^ Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami. Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) Warszawa 2009 ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6 page 32. Foreword by Janusz Kurtyka. (Digital copy: Internet Archive Wayback Machine)
  220. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Holocaust Encyclopedia: "The German Army and the Racial Nature of the War Against the Soviet Union"". Ushmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  221. ^ Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei. Sankt-Peterburg 1995; ISBN 5-86789-023-6. M.V. Philimoshin of the War Ministry of the Russian Federation About the results of calculation of losses among the civilian population of the USSR and Russian Federation 1941–1945, pp. 124–31 (in Russian; these losses are for the entire territory of the USSR in 1941, including Polish territories annexed in 1939–40).
  222. ^ Perrie, Maureen (2006), The Cambridge History of Russia: The twentieth century, Cambridge University Press (2006), pp. 225–27; ISBN 0-521-81144-9
  223. ^ Bohdan Wytwycky,The Other Holocaust: Many Circles of Hell The Novak Report, 1980
  224. ^ Niewyk, Donald L. (2000) The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust, Columbia University Press, 2000; ISBN 0-231-11200-9, p. 49
  225. ^ Magocsi, Paul Robert (1996). A History of Ukraine. University of Toronto Press. p. 633. ISBN 9780802078209.
  226. ^ Dieter Pohl, Verfolgung und Massenmord in der NS-Zeit 1933–1945, WBG (Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft), 2003; ISBN 3534151585, pp. 109, 128, 153
  227. ^ Michael Berenbaum (ed.), A Mosaic of Victims: Non-Jews Persecuted and Murdered by the Nazis, New York University Press, 1990; ISBN 1-85043-251-1
  228. ^ Human Losses of the USSR in the Period of WWII: Collection of Articles (In Russian). Saint-Petersburg, 1995; ISBN 5-86789-023-6. M. V. Philimoshin of the War Ministry of the Russian Federation About the results of calculation of losses among civilian population of the USSR and Russian Federation 1941–1945, pp. 124–31.
    The Russian Academy of Science article by M. V. Philimoshin based this figure on sources published in the Soviet era.
  229. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Holocaust Encyclopedia: "Persecution of Homosexuals in the Third Reich"". Ushmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  230. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Holocaust Encyclopedia "How many Catholics were killed during the Holocaust?"". Ushmm.org. Archived from the original on May 23, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  231. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Holocaust Encyclopedia "Jehovah's Witnesses"". Ushmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  232. ^ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Holocaust Encyclopedia: "Freemasonry Under the Nazi Regime", ushmm.org; accessed March 4, 2016.
  233. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Holocaust Encyclopedia "Blacks During the Holocaust"". Ushmm.org. January 6, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  234. ^ ""Non-Jewish Resistance" Holocaust Encyclopedia, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C". Ushmm.org. January 6, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  235. ^ "Croatia" profile, Yad Vashem, Shoah Resource Center.
  236. ^ "Jasenovac". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved April 7, 2012.
  237. ^ "Wiesenthal Center: Croatia Must Act To Counter Veneration Of Fascist Ustashe Past | Simon Wiesenthal Center". Archived from the original on 2018-06-21. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  238. ^ Vladimir Dedijer, History of Yugoslavia, McGraw-Hill Inc. (USA), 1975; ISBN 0-07-016235-2, p. 582
  239. ^ "The German Military and the Holocaust". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  240. ^ Adam Jones (2010), Genocide: A Comprehensive Introduction (2nd ed.), p. 271. – "'" Next to the Jews in Europe," wrote Alexander Werth', "the biggest single German crime was undoubtedly the extermination by hunger, exposure and in other ways of [...] Russian war prisoners." Yet the murder of at least 3.3 million Soviet POWs is one of the least-known of modern genocides; there is still no full-length book on the subject in English. It also stands as one of the most intensive genocides of all time: "a holocaust that devoured millions", as Catherine Merridale acknowledges. The large majority of POWs, some 2.8 million, were killed in just eight months of 1941–42, a rate of slaughter matched (to my knowledge) only by the 1994 Rwanda genocide."
  241. ^ R. J. Rummel. Statistics of democide: Genocide and Mass Murder since 1900 Transaction 1998 ISBN 3-8258-4010-7 [2]
  242. ^ a b Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945 Transaction 2007 ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8 (Werner Gruhl is former chief of NASA's Cost and Economic Analysis Branch with a lifetime interest in the study of the First and Second World Wars.) Publisher : Routledge https://www.routledge.com/Imperial-Japans-World-War-Two-1931-1945/Gruhl/p/book/9781412811040
  243. ^ "Imperial Japan's World War Two 1931–1945 – Directory". www.japanww2.com. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  244. ^ a b Ian Dear & MRD Foot, The Oxford Companion to World War II (2001) p. 443
  245. ^ Van Waterford, Prisoners of the Japanese in World War II, McFarland & Co., 1994; ISBN 0-89950-893-6, pp. 141–46 (figures taken from De Japanse Burgenkampen by D. Van Velden
  246. ^ Bernice Archer, The internment of Western civilians under the Japanese, 1941–1945: a patchwork of internment. London, New York: Routledge Curzon, 2004. ISBN 962-209-910-6, p. 5
  247. ^ a b Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei. Sankt-Peterburg 1995 ISBN 5-86789-023-6 p. 175
  248. ^ Edwin Bacon, Glasnost and the Gulag: New information on Soviet forced labour around World War II. Soviet Studies Vol 44. 1992-6
  249. ^ Polian, Pavel (2004). Against Their Will: The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR. Central European University Press. ISBN 978-963-9241-68-8.
  250. ^ Getty, J. Arch; Rittersporn, Gabor T.; Zemskov, V. N. (October 1993). "Victims of the Soviet Penal System in the Prewar Years: A First Approach on the Basis of Archival Evidence". American Historical Review. 98 (4): 1017–1049. doi:10.2307/2166597. JSTOR 2166597.
  251. ^ Getty, Rittersporn & Zemskov 1993.
  252. ^ Wheatcroft, Stephen G. (1999). "Victims of Stalinism and the Soviet Secret Police: The Comparability and Reliability of the Archival Data-Not the Last Word". Europe-Asia Studies. 51 (2): 315–345. doi:10.1080/09668139999056.
  253. ^ Conquest, Robert (1991). "Excess deaths and camp numbers: Some comments". Soviet Studies. 43 (5): 949–952. doi:10.1080/09668139108411973.
  254. ^ Rosefielde, Steven (2009). Red Holocaust. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-77757-5.
  255. ^ Rosefielde 2009, pp. 76–77.
  256. ^ Rosefielde 2009, p. 59.
  257. ^ Rosefielde 2009, p. 179, . Rosefielde's figures were derived by estimating the population from 1939 to 1945 using hypothetical birth and death rates; he then compares this 1945 estimated population to the actual ending population in 1945. The difference is 31.0 million excess deaths of which 23.4 million are attributed to the war and 7.6 million to Soviet repression.
  258. ^ Michael Haynes. A Century Of State Murder?: Death and Policy in Twentieth Century Russia, Pluto Press, 2003; ISBN 0745319300, pp. 62–89.
  259. ^ a b Stephane Courtois, The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression, Harvard Univ Pr, 1999 ISBN 0-674-07608-7 p. 372
  260. ^ a b "Project InPosterum: Poland WWII Casualties". projectinposterum.org.
  261. ^ a b c d e f "Estonian State Commission for the Examination of Repressive Policies Carried out During the Occupations" (PDF). White Book. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  262. ^ Michael Haynes. A Century Of State Murder?: Death and Policy in Twentieth Century Russia, Pluto Press, 2003; ISBN 0745319300, pp. 214–15.
  263. ^ Polian 2004, p. 123.
  264. ^ Polian 2004, p. 119.
  265. ^ Polian 2004, pp. 123–157.
  266. ^ J. Otto Pohl, The Stalinist Penal System: A History of Soviet Repression and Terror, 1930–1953, McFarland & Company, 1997; ISBN 0-7864-0336-5, p. 133
  267. ^ J. Otto Pohl, The Stalinist Penal System: A History of Soviet Repression and Terror, 1930–1953, McFarland & Company, 1997; ISBN 0-7864-0336-5, p. 148. The Soviet Archives did not provide the details by year of the figure of 309,100 deaths in the settlements.
  268. ^ G. F. Krivosheev (2001). Rossiia i SSSR v voinakh XX veka: Poteri vooruzhennykh sil; statisticheskoe issledovanie. OLMA-Press. pp. Tables 200–203. ISBN 978-5-224-01515-3. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  269. ^ Elliott, Mark, Pawns of Yalta: Soviet Refugees and America's Role in Their Repatriation, University of Illinois Press, 1982; ISBN 0-252-00897-9
  270. ^ a b c d e Overmans 2000, pp. 333–335.
  271. ^ a b John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 297
  272. ^ Ellis, John. World War II – A statistical survey Facts on File 1993. ISBN 0-8160-2971-7. p. 254
  273. ^ John W. Dower War Without Mercy 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 363 (According to John W. Dower, the "Known deaths of Japanese troops awaiting repatriation in Allied (non-Soviet) hands were listed as 81,090 by U.S. authorities; An additional 300,000 Japanese prisoners died in Soviet hands after the surrender")
  274. ^ "Reports of General MacArthurMACARTHUR IN JAPAN:THE OCCUPATION: MILITARY PHASE VOLUME I SUPPLEMENT' U.S. Government printing Office 1966 p. 130 endnote 36". History.army.mil. Archived from the original on 2018-12-19. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
  275. ^ Nimmo, William Behind a curtain of silence: Japanese in Soviet custody, 1945–1956, Greenwood 1989; ISBN 978-0-313-25762-9, pp. 116–18; "The Japanese Ministry of Welfare and Foreign Office reported that 347,000 military personnel and civilians were dead or missing in Soviet hands after the war. The Japanese list the losses of 199,000 in Manchurian transit camps, 36,000 in North Korea, 9,000 from Sakhalin and 103,000 in the U.S.S.R."
  276. ^ Giuseppe Fioravanzo, La Marina italiana nella seconda guerra mondiale, Volume XXI – L'organizzazione della Marina durante il conflitto, Tomo II: Evoluzione organica dal 10.6.1940 al 8.9.1943, Historical Branch of the Italian Navy, 1975, pp. 346–364
  277. ^ Giorgi, Alessandro (2015-08-26). Cronaca della Seconda Guerra Mondiale 1939–1945. Alessandro Giorgi. ISBN 9786050408539.
  278. ^ Arrigo Petacco (9 December 2014). La nostra guerra 1940–1945. Mondadori. pp. 236–. ISBN 978-88-520-5783-0.
  279. ^ Giovanni Di Capua (2005). Resistenzialismo versus Resistenza. Rubbettino Editore. pp. 77–. ISBN 978-88-498-1197-1.
  280. ^ The number of partisans escalated during the final insurrection of April 1945.
  281. ^ Bruno Vespa (7 October 2010). Vincitori e vinti (in Italian). Edizioni Mondadori. pp. 187–. ISBN 978-88-520-1191-7.
  282. ^ "Italians in WWII". Storiaxxisecolo.it. Retrieved June 15, 2011.
  283. ^ A large number of partisans and members of the RSI forces were former members of the armed forces of the Kingdom of Italy, to which is referred the 3,430,000 figure.
  284. ^ "Italian Ministry of Defence, Ufficio dell'Albo d'Oro, 2010" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  285. ^ 600,000 POWs of Allies; 50,000 POWs of Russians; 650,000 POWs of Germans [3]
  286. ^ a b Krivosheev 1997, pp. 51–80.
  287. ^ Krivosheev 1997, pp. 85–87.
  288. ^ Krivosheev 1997, pp. 230–238.
  289. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, pp. 13–14.
  290. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, pp. 20–21.
  291. ^ a b c d e Strength and Casualties of the Armed Forces and Auxiliary Services of the United Kingdom 1939–1945 HMSO 1946 Cmd.6832
  292. ^ a b c d UK Central Statistical Office Statistical Digest of the War HMSO 1951.
  293. ^ a b c d e f g "Congressional Research Report – American War and Military Operations Casualties. Updated February 26, 2010" (PDF). Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  294. ^ a b c d e f g h i STATISTICAL AND ACCOUNTING BRANCH OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL (June 1, 1953). "Tables "Battle casualties by type of casualty and disposition, type of personnel, and theater: 7 December 1941 – 31 December 1946" through "Battle casualties by type of casualty and disposition, and duty branch: 7 December 1941 – 31 December 1946"". U.S. Army Battle Casualties and Non-battle Deaths in World War II. U.S. Department of the Army. pp. 5–8. Retrieved 11 January 2015 – via Combined Arms Research Library Digital Library.[permanent dead link]
  295. ^ a b c U. S. DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, AMERICAN PRISONERS OF WAR (POWs) AND MISSING IN ACTION (MIAs)
  296. ^ "American Merchant Marine in World War 2". www.usmm.org. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  297. ^ "US Marine Corps History" (PDF). Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  298. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 584.
  299. ^ "History of the USPHS". www.usphs.gov. Archived from the original on 2018-06-21. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  300. ^ "The Public Health Service Commissioned Corps | Defense Media Network". Defense Media Network. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  301. ^ "NOAA History /NOAA Legacy/NOAA Corps and the Coast and Geodetic Survey". www.history.noaa.gov. Archived from the original on 2017-10-28. Retrieved 2018-06-21.
  302. ^ U. S. DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS, AMERICAN PRISONERS OF WAR (POWs) AND MISSING IN ACTION (MIAs) (incl. 14,072 dead while POWs)
  303. ^ a b https://fas.org/man/crs/RL30606.pdf Archived 2016-01-12 at the Wayback Machine CRS Report for Congress, U.S. Prisoners of War and Civilian American Citizens Captured and Interned by Japan in World War II: The Issue of Compensation by Japan (figure does not include an additional c. 19,000 civilians interned)
  304. ^ a b Overmans 2000, p. 335.
  305. ^ Overmans 2000, pp. 236, 239.
  306. ^ Overmans 2000, p. 289.
  307. ^ Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei. Sankt-Peterburg 1995; ISBN 5-86789-023-6, p. 109
  308. ^ Erlikman 2004, p. 20.
  309. ^ a b c d e Krivosheev 1997, p. 85.
  310. ^ a b c "G.F. Krivosheev. Rossiia i SSSR v voinakh XX veka: Poteri vooruzhennykh sil; statisticheskoe issledovanie OLMA-Press, 2001; ISBN 5-224-01515-4 Table 176". Lib.ru. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  311. ^ Krivosheev 1997, pp. 85–86, 236.
  312. ^ Krivosheev 1997, p. 86.
  313. ^ Erlikman 2004, p. 21.
  314. ^ a b Krivosheev 1997, p. 91.
  315. ^ Krivosheev 1997, p. 236.
  316. ^ Ellis, John. World War II – A statistical survey Facts on File 1993. ISBN 0-8160-2971-7. pp. 253–54
  317. ^ "Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2021-2022 p. 36". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 28 February 2023.Figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials
  318. ^ Grant, Reg. "World War II: Europe", p. 60.
  319. ^ a b c d e f g h The Times on November 30, 1945. The official losses of the Commonwealth and the Colonies were published here
  320. ^ "The "Debt of Honour Register" from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission". Direct.gov.uk. Archived from the original on June 11, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  321. ^ a b Dower 1986, pp. 364.
  322. ^ a b c d Clodfelter 2002, pp. 584–591.
  323. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 585.
  324. ^ Clodfelter 2002, pp. 584–585.
  325. ^ Kara Allison Schubert Carroll, Coming to grips with America: The Japanese American experience in the Southwest. 2011; ISBN 1-2440-3111-9, p. 184
  326. ^ Beaumont, Joan (2001). Australian Defence: Sources and Statistics. The Australian Centenary History of Defence. Volume VI. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-554118-2.
  327. ^ Long, Gavin (1963). The Final Campaigns. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Canberra: Australian War Memorial.
  328. ^ McKernan, Michael (2006). Strength of a Nation: Six years of Australians fighting for the nation and defending the homefront in World War II. Crows Nest NSW: Allen & Unwin. p. 393. ISBN 1-74114-714-X.
  329. ^ Frumkin, Gregory (1951). Population Changes in Europe Since 1939. Geneva. pp. 44–45. OCLC 807475.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  330. ^ Overmans 2000, p. 230.
  331. ^ Ellis, John (1993). World War II – A statistical survey. Facts on File. p. 255. ISBN 0-8160-2971-7.
  332. ^ a b Erlikman 2004, pp. 38–39.
  333. ^ Gruhl, Werner (2007). Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945. Transaction. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8.
  334. ^ "Service Files of the Second World War – War Dead, 1939–1947". Library and Archived Canada. 2013-03-26. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  335. ^ Mitter, Rana (2013). Forgotten Ally: China's World War II, 1937–1945. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-618-89425-3.
  336. ^ Mitter, Rana (2013). Forgotten Ally: China's World War II, 1937–1945. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 381. ISBN 978-0-618-89425-3.
  337. ^ a b Ho Ping-ti (1959). Studies on the Population of China, 1368–1953. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. pp. 251–52. OCLC 170812.
  338. ^ 卞修跃 (2012). 抗日战争时期中国人口损失问题研究(1937–1945) [Research on Anti-Japanese War of China's population loss problems (1937–1945)] (in Chinese). Beijing. ISBN 9787516902059.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  339. ^ Dear, I. C. B.; Foot, M. R. D. (2005). Oxford Companion to World War II. Oxford. p. 221. ISBN 0-19-280670-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  340. ^ Ho Ping-ti (1959). Studies on the Population of China, 1368–1953. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 250. OCLC 170812.
  341. ^ United Nations, Economic and Social Council (1947). Report of the Working Group for Asia and the Far East. Supp. 10. pp. 13–14. OCLC 19441454.
  342. ^ a b Gruhl, Werner (2007). Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945. Transaction. pp. 19, 143. ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8.
  343. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 557.
  344. ^ a b Waterford, Van (1994). Prisoners of the Japanese in World War II. McFarland & Company. pp. 141–46. ISBN 0899508936.
  345. ^ Liebau, Heike; et al., eds. (2010). World in World Wars: Experiences, Perceptions, and Perspectives from Africa and Asia. Studies in Global Social History. Boston: Brill. p. 227. ISBN 978-90-04-18545-6.
  346. ^ Estonian State Commission on Examination of Policies of Repression (2005). The White Book: Losses inflicted on the Estonian nation by occupation regimes. 1940–1991. Tallinn. p. 38 Table 2. ISBN 9985-70-195-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  347. ^ Estonian State Commission on Examination of Policies of Repression (2005). The White Book: Losses inflicted on the Estonian nation by occupation regimes. 1940–1991. Tallinn. p. 18. ISBN 9985-70-195-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  348. ^ Estonian State Commission on Examination of Policies of Repression (2005). The White Book: Losses inflicted on the Estonian nation by occupation regimes. 1940–1991. Tallinn. Table 2. ISBN 9985-70-195-X.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  349. ^ Small, Melvin; Singer, Joel David (1982). Resort to Arms: International and Civil Wars 1816–1965. Sage. ISBN 0-8039-1777-5.[page needed]
  350. ^ Del Boca, Angelo (1969). The Ethiopian war. Univ. of Chicago Press. p. 261. ISBN 0-226-14217-5.
  351. ^ Kali-Nyah, Imani (2000) [1946]. Italy's War Crimes in Ethiopia (Reprinted ed.). Ethiopian Holocaust Remembrance Committee. ISBN 0-9679479-0-1.
  352. ^ Rummel, R. J. (1998). Statistics of democide: Genocide and Mass Murder since 1900. Transaction. Chapter 14. ISBN 3-8258-4010-7.
  353. ^ Erlikman 2004, p. 52.
  354. ^ a b Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. pp. 60–65
  355. ^ "Seconde Guerre mondiale: tombés sous les bombes "amies"". LExpress.fr. June 6, 2014.
  356. ^ France Ministry of Defense, memoiredeshommes.sga.defense.gouv.fr; accessed March 5, 2016.
  357. ^ France Ministry of Defense. "Mémoire des hommes".
  358. ^ Erlikman 2004, pp. 83–89.
  359. ^ Atkinson, Rick (2007). An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942–1943. Simon and Schuster. p. 478. ISBN 978-0-7435-7099-2.
  360. ^ Die deutschen Vertreibungsverluste. Bevölkerungsbilanzen für die deutschen Vertreibungsgebiete 1939/50. Statistisches Bundesamt – Wiesbaden. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag. 1958. pp. 45–46. OCLC 7363969.
  361. ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960. Bonn. 1961. p. 79.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (available online at http://www.digizeitschriften.de/de/openaccess)
  362. ^ Eberhardt, Piotr (2006). Political Migrations In Poland 1939–1948 (PDF). Warsaw. pp. 53–54. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-06-23.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  363. ^ Wirtschaft und Statistik November 1949 pp. 226–29, journal published by Statistisches Bundesamt Deutschland. (German Federal Statistical Office)
  364. ^ a b Gleitze, B. (1953). "Deutschlands Bevölkerungsverluste durch den Zweiten Weltkrieg". Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung. 4: 375–84. ISSN 0340-1707.
  365. ^ Germany reports. With an introduction by Konrad Adenauer. Germany (West). Presse-und Informationsamt. Wiesbaden, Distribution: F. Steiner, 1961, p. 32
  366. ^ Steinberg, Heinz Günter (1991). Die Bevölkerungsentwicklung in Deutschland im Zweiten Weltkrieg. Bonn. pp. 142–145. ISBN 9783885570899.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  367. ^ Hubert, Michael (1998). Deutschland im Wandel. Geschichte der deutschen Bevolkerung seit 1815. Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 272. ISBN 3-515-07392-2.
  368. ^ a b c Kammerer, Willi; Kammerer, Anja (2005). Narben bleiben die Arbeit der Suchdienste – 60 Jahre nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg (PDF). Berlin: Dienststelle. p. 12. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-06-11. Retrieved 2015-06-23.
  369. ^ Schramm, Percy (1982). Kriegstagebuch des Oberkommandos der Wehrmacht: 1940–1945. Bernard & Grafe. pp. 1508–11. ISBN 9783881990738.
  370. ^ Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. Statistical bulletin January 1946. p. 7.
  371. ^ Müller-Hillebrand, Burkhart (1969). Das Heer 1933–1945. Entwicklung des organisatorischen Aufbaues. Band III. Der Zweifrontenkrieg. Das Heer vom Beginn des Feldzuges gegen die Sowjetunion bis zum Kriegsende. Frankfurt am Main: Mittler. p. 262. OCLC 3923177.
  372. ^ a b Overmans, Rüdiger (1989). "Die Toten des Zweiten Weltkrieges in Deutschland. Bilanz der Forschung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Wehrmacht und Vertreibungsverluste". In Michalka, Wolfgang (ed.). Der Zweite Weltkrieg. Analysen, Grundzüge, Forschungsbilanz. München: Piper. pp. 862–63. ISBN 3-492-10811-3.
  373. ^ Erich Maschke, Zur Geschichte der deutschen Kriegsgefangenen des Zweiten Weltkrieges. E. Bielefeld & W. Gieseking, 1962–1974 vol 15, pp. 185–230.
  374. ^ a b Krivosheev 1997, p. 278.
  375. ^ Krivosheev 1997, p. 276.
  376. ^ "Rüdiger Overmans". www.ruediger-overmans.de.
  377. ^ Overmans, Rüdiger; Goeken-Haidl, Ulrike (2000). Soldaten hinter Stacheldraht. Deutsche Kriegsgefangene des Zweiten Weltkriege (in German). Ullstein. p. 246. ISBN 3-549-07121-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  378. ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960 Bonn 1961 p. 78, available online at [4].
  379. ^ Richard Overy, The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War Over Europe 1940–1945 (2013) pp. 304–7
  380. ^ Germany reports. With an introd. by Konrad Adenauer. Germany (West). Presse- und Informationsamt. Wiesbaden, Distribution: F. Steiner, 1961 pp. 31–33.
  381. ^ Euthanasie im Nationalsozialismus Bundesarchiv Euthanasie im Nationalsozialismus Archived 2013-10-21 at the Wayback Machine;
  382. ^ a b Facts concerning the problem of the German expellees and refugees, Bonn 1967
  383. ^ a b Alfred M. de Zayas: A terrible Revenge. Palgrave/Macmillan, New York, 1994; ISBN 1-4039-7308-3, p. 152-
  384. ^ "Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung, Die Vertreibung der Deutschen aus den Gebieten jenseits von Oder und Neiße", bpb.de (2005); accessed December 6, 2014.(in German)
  385. ^ German Federal Archive, Siegel, Silke Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1948. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28. Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewählte Erlebnisberichte. Bonn 1989, pp. 53–54.
  386. ^ a b c Ursprünge, Arten und Folgen des Konstrukts "Bevölkerung" vor, im und nach dem "Dritten Reich" Zur Geschichte der deutschen Bevölkerungswissenschaft: Ingo Haar Die deutschen ›Vertreibungsverluste‹ – Forschungsstand, Kontexte und Probleme, Ursprünge, Arten und Folgen des Konstrukts "Bevölkerung" vor, im und nach dem "Dritten Reich", Berlin: Springer, 2009; ISBN 978-3-531-16152-5 doi:10.1007/978-3-531-91514-2_17 (in German) "Tatsächlich gibt es in der rechnerischen Bilanz zwar einen Bevölkerungsverlust von zwei Millionen Personen für die Gebiete jenseits der Oder-Neiße-Linie und aller ›Auslandsdeutschen‹, aber damit sind alle deutschen Verluste von 1939 bis 1944/45 in diesen Regionen gemeint, einschließlich der Vermissten und Unidentifizierten. Außerdem sind in dieser Zahl auch vermeintlichen deutschen Geburtenausfälle, die Staatsangehörigkeitswechsler, ungezählte Wehrmachtstote, die ermordeten deutschen Juden und Vermisste einbezogen. Die Zahl der konkret bezeugten Opfer beläuft sich jedoch nicht mehr als auf 0,5 bis 0,6 Mio. Personen insgesamt. Wolfgang Benz reflektiert die Problematik des ungenügenden historischen Kontextes und der mangelnden Transparenz der bisheriger Zahlen sehr deutlich, indem er von rund zwei Millionen Deutschen spricht, die auf der Flucht vor der Roten Armee und mit der Vertreibung ihr Leben ließen. Davon waren im polnischen Fall im engeren Sinne aber nur 0,1 bis 0,2 Mio. Personen direkte Opfer von Rache- und Mordaktionen."
  387. ^ a b Stefan Koldehoff, Keine deutsche Opferarithmetik (interview with Christoph Bergner), Deutschlandfunk, 29 November 2006.
  388. ^ a b c "Search Results | The Online Books Page". onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu.
  389. ^ Hans Sperling, Die Luftkriegsverluste während des zweiten Weltkriegs in Deutschland, Wirtschaft und Statistik October 1956, journal published by Statistisches Bundesamt Deutschland. (German government Statistical Office)
  390. ^ Statistisches Jahrbuch für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland 1960, p. 78.
  391. ^ "Bundesamt für Bevölkerungsschutz und Katastrophenhilfe – Hampe: Der zivile Luftschutz im Zweiten Weltkrieg". www.bbk.bund.de. Archived from the original on 2020-05-09. Retrieved 2019-01-22.
  392. ^ Antill, Peter (2005-10-10). Peter Antill & Dennis, Peter. Berlin 1945: end of the Thousand Year Reich. Bloomsbury USA. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-84176-915-8. Retrieved June 15, 2011.
  393. ^ Germany reports. With an introduction by Konrad Adenauer. Germany (West). Presse- und Informationsamt. Wiesbaden, Distribution: F. Steiner, 1961], p. 32
  394. ^ Bundesarchiv Euthanasie" im Nationalsozialismus Archived 2013-10-21 at the Wayback Machine, bundesarchiv.de; accessed March 5, 2016.(in German)
  395. ^ a b Die deutschen Vertreibungsverluste. Bevölkerungsbilanzen für die deutschen Vertreibungsgebiete 1939/50.Herausgeber: Statistisches Bundesamt – Wiesbaden – Stuttgart: Verlag W. Kohlhammer, 1958.
  396. ^ Ingo Haar, "Hochgerechnetes Unglück, Die Zahl der deutschen Opfer nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg wird übertrieben", Süddeutsche Zeitung, November 14, 2006
  397. ^ R. J. Rummel. Statistics of democide : Genocide and Mass Murder since 1900 (1,863,000 in post war expulsions and an additional 1.0 million in wartime flight)
  398. ^ Alfred M. de Zayas: A terrible Revenge. Palgrave/Macmillan, New York, 1994; ISBN 1-4039-7308-3, pp. 152- (2,111,000)
  399. ^ Charles S Maier, The Unmasterable Past: History, Holocaust, and German National Identity Harvard Univ, MA, 1988; ISBN 0-674-92975-6, p. 75 (2,000,000)
  400. ^ Douglas Botting, The Aftermath: Europe (World War II), Time-Life Books, 1983; ISBN 0-8094-3411-3, pp. 21, 81 (2,000,000)
  401. ^ H.W. Schoenberg, Germans from the East: A Study of their migration, resettlement and subsequent group history, since 1945, Springer London, Limited, 1970; ISBN 90-247-5044-X, p. 33 (2,225,000)
  402. ^ Hermann Kinder, Werner Hilgemann, Ernest A. Menze, Anchor Atlas of World History, Vol. 2: 1978 (3,000,000)
  403. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica – 1992 (2,384,000)
  404. ^ Kurt Glaser & Stephan Possony, Victims of Politics – 1979 (2,111,000)
  405. ^ Sir John Keegan, The Second World War, 1989 (3.1 million including 1.0 million during wartime flight)
  406. ^ The Expulsion of "German" Communities from Eastern Europe at the end of the Second World War, Steffen Prauser and Arfon Rees, European University Institute, Florence. HEC No. 2004/1, p. 4 (2,000,000)
  407. ^ Wirtschaft und Statistik 1950 #2 pp.8–9
  408. ^ Bundesministerium für Vertriebene, Dokumentation der Vertreibung der Deutschen aus Ost-Mitteleuropa Vol. 1–5, Bonn, 1954–1961
  409. ^ Gesamterhebung zur Klärung des Schicksals der deutschen Bevölkerung in den Vertreibungsgebieten, München : Zentralstelle des Kirchl. Suchdienstes, 1965
  410. ^ Ursprünge, Arten und Folgen des Konstrukts "Bevölkerung" vor, im und nach dem "Dritten Reich" Zur Geschichte der deutschen Bevölkerungswissensch: Ingo Haar Die deutschen ›Vertreibungsverluste‹ – Forschungsstand, Kontexte und Probleme, in Ursprünge, Arten und Folgen des Konstrukts "Bevölkerung" vor, im und nach dem "Dritten Reich" Springer 2009; ISBN 978-3-531-16152-5, p. 369
  411. ^ Rűdiger Overmans. Personelle Verluste der deutschen Bevölkerung durch Flucht und Vertreibung. (This paper was a presentation at an academic conference in Warsaw Poland in 1994), Dzieje Najnowsze Rocznik XXI-1994
  412. ^ Pistohlkors, Gert. Informationen zur Klärung der Schicksale von Flüchtlingen aus den. Vertreibungsgebieten östlich von Oder und Neiße. Published in Schulze, Rainer, Flüchtlinge und Vertriebene in der westdeutschen Nachkriegsgeschichte : Bilanzierung der Forschung und Perspektiven für die künftige Forschungsarbeit Hildesheim : A. Lax, 1987
  413. ^ Hans Henning Hahn and Eva Hahn: Die Vertreibung im deutschen Erinnern. Legenden, Mythos, Geschichte. Paderborn 2010; ISBN 978-3-506-77044-8, p. 702
  414. ^ German Federal Archive Spieler, Silke. ed. Vertreibung und Vertreibungsverbrechen 1945–1948. Bericht des Bundesarchivs vom 28. Mai 1974. Archivalien und ausgewählte Erlebnisberichte.. Bonn: Kulturstiftung der deutschen Vertriebenen. (1989); ISBN 3-88557-067-X.
  415. ^ Gerhard Reichling, Die deutschen Vertriebenen in Zahlen, Teil 1, Bonn 1995 (revised ed)
  416. ^ Christoph Bergner, Secretary of State of Germany's Bureau for Inner Affairs, outlines the stance of the respective governmental institutions in Deutschlandfunk on 29 November 2006, [5]
  417. ^ [6] Archived 2017-06-11 at the Wayback Machine|Willi Kammerer & Anja Kammerer – Narben bleiben die Arbeit der Suchdienste – 60 Jahre nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg Berlin Dienststelle 2005, p. 12: published by the Search Service of the German Red Cross; the forward to the book was written by German President Horst Köhler and the German interior minister Otto Schily
  418. ^ "Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung, Die Vertreibung der Deutschen aus den Gebieten jenseits von Oder und Neiße", bpb.de; accessed 1 December 2015.(in German)
  419. ^ a b c Ingo Haar, "Hochgerechnetes Unglück, Die Zahl der deutschen Opfer nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg wird übertrieben", Süddeutsche Zeitung, 14 November 2006.
  420. ^ a b Hans Henning Hahn & Eva Hahn, Die Vertreibung im deutschen Erinnern. Legenden, Mythos, Geschichte, Paderborn: Schöningh, 2010, pp. 659–726, 839: ill., maps; 24cm. D820.P72 G475 2010; ISBN 978-3-506-77044-8 (in German)
  421. ^ a b c Rűdiger Overmans- "Personelle Verluste der deutschen Bevölkerung durch Flucht und Vertreibung". (this paper was a presentation at an academic conference in Warsaw Poland in 1994), Dzieje Najnowsze Rocznik XXI-1994
  422. ^ a b c Zahl der Vertreibungsopfer ist neu zu erforschen Rüdiger Overmans Deutschlandfunk; accessed June 21, 2015. (in German)
  423. ^ a b Ursprünge, Arten und Folgen des Konstrukts "Bevölkerung" vor, im und nach dem "Dritten Reich" Zur Geschichte der deutschen Bevölkerungswissenschaft: Ingo Haar Die deutschen ›Vertreibungsverluste‹ – Forschungsstand, Kontexte und Probleme, Ursprünge, Arten und Folgen des Konstrukts "Bevölkerung" vor, im und nach dem "Dritten Reich", Berlin: Springer, 2009; ISBN 978-3-531-16152-5 (in German)
  424. ^ a b c Herausforderung Bevölkerung: zu Entwicklungen des modernen Denkens über die Bevölkerung vor, im und nach dem Dritten Reich Ingo Haar, Bevölkerungsbilanzen" und "Vertreibungsverluste. Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte der deutschen Opferangaben aus Flucht und Vertreibung, Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2007; ISBN 978-3-531-15556-2 (in German)
  425. ^ a b c Ingo Haar, Die Deutschen "Vertreibungsverluste –Zur Entstehung der "Dokumentation der Vertreibung – Tel Aviver Jahrbuch, 2007, Tel Aviv : Universität Tel Aviv, Fakultät für Geisteswissenschaften, Forschungszentrum für Geschichte; Gerlingen [Germany]: Bleicher Verlag
  426. ^ a b c Ingo Haar, "Straty zwiazane z wypedzeniami: stan badañ, problemy, perspektywy", Polish Diplomatic Review Archived 2011-03-02 at the Wayback Machine, 2007, nr 5 (39); accessed 6 December 2014. (in Polish)
  427. ^ Overmans 2000.
  428. ^ Die Toten des Zweiten Weltkriegs in Deutschland. Bilanz der Forschung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Wehrmacht- und Vertreibungsverluste, in: Der Zweite Weltkrieg. Analysen, Grundzüge, Forschungsbilanz, Michalka, Wolfgang (Hrsg.), München: Piper 1989, S. 858–873
  429. ^ Die Flucht der deutschen Bevölkerung 1944/45, dhm.de; accessed 21 June 2015.(in German)
  430. ^ Hoensch, Jörg K. und Hans Lemberg, Begegnung und Konflikt. Schlaglichter auf das Verhältnis von Tschechen, Slowaken und Deutschen 1815–1989 Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung 2001; ISBN 3-89861-002-0
  431. ^ Bernadetta Nitschke. Vertreibung und Aussiedlung der deutschen Bevölkerung aus Polen 1945 bis 1949. München, Oldenbourg Verlag, 2003; ISBN 3-486-56832-9, pp. 269–82.
  432. ^ Witold Sienkiewicz & Grzegorz Hryciuk, Wysiedlenia, wypędzenia i ucieczki 1939–1959: atlas ziem Polski: Polacy, Żydzi, Niemcy, Ukraińcy, Warsaw: Demart, 2008, p. 170, Określa je wielkosciami między 600tys. a 1.2 mln zmarłych i zabitych. Głowną przyczyną zgonów było zimno, stres i bombardowania; accessed 26 May 2015.(in Polish)
  433. ^ Witold Sienkiewicz & Grzegorz Hryciuk, Wysiedlenia, wypędzenia i ucieczki 1939–1959: atlas ziem Polski: Polacy, Żydzi, Niemcy, Ukraińcy, Warsaw: Demart, 2008, p. 187
  434. ^ Alan S. Milward, The Reconstruction of Western Europe
  435. ^ "Does Germany owe Greece wartime reparations money?". BBC News. June 14, 2005. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  436. ^ "Vast Greek war claims against Germany explode like a 'time-bomb'", The Telegraph, 22 March 2014.
  437. ^ Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. pp. 89–91
  438. ^ Dieter Pohl, Verfolgung und Massenmord in der NS-Zeit 1933–1945, WBG (Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft), 2003; ISBN 3534151585, pp. 123–24.
  439. ^ a b "McMillan Report- POWs from Guam in Japan, Battle for Guam". www.mansell.com.
  440. ^ "The Japanese Seizure of Guam | Marine Corps Association". www.mca-marines.org. Archived from the original on 2015-03-22. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  441. ^ "To nie sympatia, to solidarność". www.tygodnikpowszechny.pl. June 5, 2005.
  442. ^ a b Parker, John. (2005). The Gurkhas: The Inside Story of the World's Most Feared Soldiers. Headline Book Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7553-1415-7 p. 250
  443. ^ a b c d John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8 p. 296
  444. ^ Sen, Amartya. "Reflections of an economist". India Together. Archived from the original on 18 June 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  445. ^ Geoffrey Roberts (January 11, 2004). "The Challenge Of The Irish Volunteers of World War II". Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  446. ^ "Eire Civilian War Dead". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
  447. ^ Roma:Instituto Centrale Statistica. Morti E Dispersi Per Cause Belliche Negli Anni 1940–45 Rome, 1957.
  448. ^ "The effects of war losses on mortality estimates for Italy: A first attempt. Demographic Research, Vol. 13, No. 15". Demographic-research.org. Retrieved 2011-06-15.
  449. ^ Roma:Instituto Centrale Statistica Morti E Dispersi Per Cause Belliche Negli Anni 1940–45 Rome 1957, pp. 4–5
  450. ^ Roma:Instituto Centrale Statistica Morti E Dispersi Per Cause Belliche Negli Anni 1940–45, Rome 1957, pp. 6–7
  451. ^ Roma:Instituto Centrale Statistica Morti E Dispersi Per Cause Belliche Negli Anni 1940–45, Rome 1957, p. 20
  452. ^ Roma:Instituto Centrale Statistica Morti E Dispersi Per Cause Belliche Negli Anni 1940–45, Rome 1957, pp. 10–11
  453. ^ Ufficio Storico dello Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. Commissariato generale C.G.V. Ministero della Difesa – Edizioni 1986 (in Italian)
  454. ^ Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945, Transaction 2007; ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8, p. 144
  455. ^ "Figures were compiled by the Relief Bureau of the Ministry of Health and Welfare in March 1964". Australia-Japan Research Project. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  456. ^ Dower, p. 298
  457. ^ American Historical Association: Lessons from Iwo Jima footnote 1 Retrieved 10 March 2016
  458. ^ Stevens, The Naval Campaigns for New Guinea paragraph 30 Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  459. ^ a b Japan Statistical Year-Book, 1949 [etc.]. Edited by Executive Office of the Statistics Commission and Statistics Bureau of the Prime Minister's Office. Eng. & Jap. [Tokyo] 1949, pp. 1056–58, Tables 608-09
  460. ^ a b John W. Dower, War Without Mercy 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 296 (Dower cites the figures of killed but not the wounded)
  461. ^ Japan Statistical Year-Book, 1949 [etc.]. Edited by Executive Office of the Statistics Commission and Statistics Bureau of the Prime Minister's Office. Eng. & Jap. [Tokyo], 1949, p. 1058, Tables 608–09
  462. ^ Annual Changes in Population of Japan Proper 1 October 1920–1 October 1947, General Headquarters for the Allied Powers Economic and Scientific Section Research and Programs Division. Tokyo, July 1948. p.20
  463. ^ Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945 Transaction 2007; ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8, p. 144
  464. ^ a b c d e John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, pp. 299, 363
  465. ^ "Reports of General MacArthur. MacArthur in Japan: The Occupation: Military Phase, Volume I Supplement – U.S. Government printing Office 1966, p. 130, endnote 36". History.army.mil. Archived from the original on December 19, 2018. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  466. ^ Nimmo, William. Behind a curtain of silence: Japanese in Soviet custody, 1945–1956, Greenwood 1989; ISBN 978-0-313-25762-9, pp. 116–18
  467. ^ Ishikida, Miki (2005). Toward Peace: War Responsibility, Postwar Compensation, and Peace Movements and Education in Japan. iUniverse, Inc. (July 13, 2005). p. 3. ISBN 978-0595350636. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  468. ^ "G. F. Krivosheev. Rossiia i SSSR v voinakh XX veka: Poteri vooruzhennykh sil; statisticheskoe issledovanie, OLMA-Press, 2001; ISBN 5-224-01515-4". Lib.ru. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  469. ^ "Overall Report of Damage Sustained by the Nation During the Pacific War Economic Stabilization Agency, Planning Department, Office of the Secretary General, 1949". JapanAirRaids. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
  470. ^ "Overall Report of Damage Sustained by the Nation During the Pacific War Economic Stabilization Agency, Planning Department, Office of the Secretary General, 1949" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  471. ^ Japan Statistical Year-Book, 1949 [etc.]. Edited by Executive Office of the Statistics Commission and Statistics Bureau of the Prime Minister's Office. Eng. & Jap. [Tokyo], 1949, pp. 1056–57, Table 607
  472. ^ a b Eisei Ishikawa, David L. Swain, Committee for the Compilation of Materials on Damage Caused by the Atomic Bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Hiroshima and Nagasaki The Physical Medical and Social Effects of the Atomic Bombings, Basic Books, 1981, ISBN 046502985X p. 115 (English translation of Japanese study published in 1979)
  473. ^ Eisei Ishikawa, David L. Swain, Committee for the Compilation of Materials on Damage Caused by the Atomic Bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Hiroshima and Nagasaki The Physical Medical and Social Effects of the Atomic Bombings, Basic Books, 1981, ISBN 046502985X (English translation of Japanese study published in 1979
  474. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy, 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, pp. 297–99
  475. ^ "Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Subsequent Weapons Testing". Archived from the original on 2016-01-25. Retrieved 2014-07-11.
  476. ^ Radiation Effects Research Foundation How many people died as a result of the atomic bombings?, rerf.jp; accessed March 5, 2016.
  477. ^ "United States Strategic Bombing Survey Summary Report United States Government Printing Office Washington: 1946 p. 20". Retrieved 2015-06-25.
  478. ^ United States Strategic Bombing Survey, Medical Division (1947), pp. 143–44
  479. ^ United States Strategic Bombing Survey Report # 55 The effects of air attack on Japanese urban economy. United States Government Printing Office, Washington: 1947, p. 7. [Washington]. 2018-10-11. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  480. ^ United States Strategic Bombing Survey The Effects of strategic bombing on Japanese morale. United States Government Printing Office, Washington: 1947, p. 194. [Washington]. 1947. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  481. ^ "United States Strategic Bombing Survey The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki United States Government Printing Office Washington: 1946, p. 15". Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  482. ^ Major Chas. S. Nichols Jr., USMC Henry I. Shaw Jr. "Okinawa: Victory in the Pacific". Historical Branch, G-3 Division, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
  483. ^ Major Chas. S. Nichols Jr., USMC Henry I. Shaw Jr. (1955). Okinawa: Victory in the Pacific. Historical Branch, G-3 Division, Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps. p. 260.
  484. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 578.
  485. ^ "R.J. Rummel "Statistics of democide: Genocide and Mass Murder since 1900" Transaction 1998; ISBN 3-8258-4010-7 (Chapter 3)". Hawaii.edu. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  486. ^ Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945 Transaction 2007 ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8 p. 143
  487. ^ John W. Dower, War Without Mercy 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 47
  488. ^ Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. p. 107
  489. ^ John W. Dower. War Without Mercy 1986; ISBN 0-394-75172-8, p. 296
  490. ^ Werner Gruhl, Imperial Japan's World War Two, 1931–1945, Transaction 2007; ISBN 978-0-7658-0352-8, p. 91
  491. ^ "History Of The Nepalese Army". Nepalarmy.mil.np. Archived from the original on 2015-06-29. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  492. ^ "The Netherlands War Graves Foundation". Ogs.nl. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  493. ^ "Allied Merchant Navy Memorial in Newfoundland". Cdli.ca. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  494. ^ "Gordon, Maj. Richard M., (U.S. Army, retired) (28 October 2002). "Bataan, Corregidor, and the Death March: In Retrospect"" (PDF). Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  495. ^ a b c Materski, Wojciech; Szarota, Tomasz (2009). Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami. Warsaw. p. 32. ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  496. ^ a b Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami. Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), Warsaw 2009; ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6, pp. 29–30
  497. ^ a b Czesław Brzoza, Andrzej Leon Sowa, Historia Polski 1918–1945 [History of Poland: 1918–1945], pp. 694–697. Kraków 2009, Wydawnictwo Literackie, ISBN 978-83-08-04125-3.
  498. ^ "Polish Victims". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 2015-07-05.
  499. ^ [7] Meeting line between the German and the Soviet Army after their joint invasion of Poland in September 1939
  500. ^ Czesław Łuczak Polska i Polacy w drugiej wojnie światowej (Poland and Poles in the Second World War). Styczeń 1993 ISBN 83-232-0511-6 p.683
  501. ^ a b c d Gniazdowski, Mateusz. Losses Inflicted on Poland by Germany during World War II. Assessments and Estimates—an Outline The Polish Quarterly of International Affairs, 2007, no. 1. This article is available from the Central and Eastern European Online Library at http://www.ceeol.com
  502. ^ Gregory Frumkin. Population Changes in Europe Since 1939, Geneva 1951. p. 119
  503. ^ U.S. Bureau of the Census The Population of Poland Ed. W. Parker Mauldin, Washington, D.C., 1954, p. 187
  504. ^ Andreev, E. M., et al., Naselenie Sovetskogo Soiuza, 1922–1991. Moscow, Nauka, 1993; ISBN 5-02-013479-1, p. 78.
    Total Soviet losses of 26.6 million are computed for the population in mid-1941 in the territory of the Soviet Union of 1946–1991
  505. ^ Poland. Bureau odszkodowan wojennych, Statement on war losses and damages of Poland in 1939–1945. Warsaw 1947.(the figures of 2.8 million Jews and 3.2 million Poles are based on language spoken, not religion)
  506. ^ Czesław Łuczak, Szanse i trudnosci bilansu demograficznego Polski w latach 1939–1945. Dzieje Najnowsze Rocznik XXI, 1994
  507. ^ "go to note on Polish Casualties by Tadeusz Piotrowski at the bottom of the page". Project In Posterum. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  508. ^ Franciszek Proch, Poland's Way of the Cross, New York, 1987.
  509. ^ a b T. Panecki, Wsiłek zbrojny Polski w II wojnie światowej pl:Wojskowy Przegląd Historyczny, 1995, no. 1–2, pp. 13–18
  510. ^ Wojciech Materski and Tomasz Szarota. Polska 1939–1945. Straty osobowe i ofiary represji pod dwiema okupacjami. Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), Warsaw 2009; ISBN 978-83-7629-067-6, p. 20
  511. ^ "Victims of the Nazi Regime-Database of Polish citizens repressed under the German Occupation". Straty.pl. Archived from the original on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2011-06-16.
  512. ^ Nürnberg Document No. 3568. Data from this document is listed in Martin Brozat, Nationalsozialistische Polenpolitik Fischer Bücheri 1961. p. 125
  513. ^ Die deutschen Vertreibungsverluste. Bevölkerungsbilanzen für die deutschen Vertreibungsgebiete 1939/50. Herausgeber: Statistisches Bundesamt – Wiesbaden. – Stuttgart: Verlag W. Kohlhammer, 1958
  514. ^ Schimitzek, Stanislaw, Truth or Conjecture? Warsaw 1966
  515. ^ Ruas, Óscar Vasconcelos, "Relatório 1946–47", AHU
  516. ^ Urlanis, Boris (1971). Wars and Population. Moscow 1971, p. 294
  517. ^ Mark Axworthy. Third Axis Fourth Ally. Arms and Armour 1995; ISBN 1-85409-267-7, pp. 216–17
  518. ^ Mark Axworthy. Third Axis Fourth Ally. Arms and Armour 1995 ISBN 1-85409-267-7, p. 314
  519. ^ Catharine Newbury The Cohesion of Oppression: Clientship and Ethnicity in Rwanda: 1860–1960 Columbia University Press, 1993 ISBN 0-231-06257-5 pp. 157–158
  520. ^ Linden, Jan Church and revolution in Rwanda, Manchester University Press 1977; ISBN 0-8419-0305-0, p. 207
  521. ^ Alexander De Waal, Famine crimes: politics & the disaster relief industry in Africa Indiana Univ. Press, 1999; ISBN 0-253-21158-1, p. 30
  522. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2013-2014 Archived 2015-11-04 at the Wayback Machine, page 44. Figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials.
  523. ^ Poyer, Lin; Falgout, Suzanne; Carucci, Laurence Marshall. The Typhoon of War: Micronesian Experiences of the Pacific War Univ of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA, 2001; ISBN 0-8248-2168-8
  524. ^ Andreev, E.M., et al., Naselenie Sovetskogo Soiuza, 1922–1991. Moscow, Nauka, 1993; ISBN 5-02-013479-1
  525. ^ Michael Ellman and S. Maksudov, Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War:a note – World War II – Europe Asia Studies, July 1994
  526. ^ Krivosheev 1997, pp. 85–86.
  527. ^ Michael Haynes, Counting Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War: a Note, Europe Asia Studies vol 55, No. 2, 2003, 300–309
  528. ^ "Michael Ellman and S. Maksudov, Soviet Deaths in the Great Patriotic War:a note-World War II- Europe Asia Studies, July 1994" (PDF). Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  529. ^ Perrie, Maureen (2006), The Cambridge History of Russia: The Twentieth Century, Cambridge University Press, pp. 225–27
  530. ^ Andreev, EM; Darski, LE; Kharkova, TL (11 September 2002). "Population dynamics: consequences of regular and irregular changes". In Lutz, Wolfgang; Scherbov, Sergei; Volkov, Andrei (eds.). Demographic Trends and Patterns in the Soviet Union Before 1991. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-85320-5.
  531. ^ Министерство обороны Российской Федерации, MOD Russian Federation. "On Question of war Losses (in Russian)". MOD Russian Federation. Retrieved November 12, 2017.
  532. ^ , "Soviet Armed Forces Losses in Wars, Combat Operations and Military Conflicts: A Statistical Study". Military Publishing House Moscow. (Translated by U.S. government) Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  533. ^ Krivosheev 1997, pp. 85–92.
  534. ^ "Christian Streit: Keine Kameraden: Die Wehrmacht und die Sowjetischen Kriegsgefangenen, 1941–1945, Bonn: Dietz (3. Aufl., 1. Aufl. 1978), ISBN 3-8012-5016-4"Between 22 June 1941 and the end of the war, roughly 5.7 million members of the Red Army fell into German hands. In January 1945, 930,000 were still in German camps. A million at most had been released, most of whom were so-called "volunteers" (Hilfswillige) for (often compulsory) auxiliary service in the Wehrmacht. Another 500,000, as estimated by the Army High Command, had either fled or been liberated. The remaining 3,300,000 (57.5 percent of the total) had perished.
  535. ^ "Nazi persecution of Soviet Prisoners of War". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Existing sources suggest that some 5.7 million Soviet army personnel fell into German hands during World War II. As of January 1945, the German army reported that only about 930,000 Soviet POWs remained in German custody. The German army released about one million Soviet POWs as auxiliaries of the German army and the SS. About half a million Soviet POWs had escaped German custody or had been liberated by the Soviet army as it advanced westward through eastern Europe into Germany. The remaining 3.3 million, or about 57 percent of those taken prisoner, were dead by the end of the war.
  536. ^ Krivosheev 1997, pp. 228–238.
  537. ^ "Soviet POWs". 2016-11-10. Archived from the original on 2016-11-10. Retrieved 2021-03-13.
  538. ^ Zemskov, Viktor. "The extent of human losses USSR in the Great Patriotic War and Statistical Lynbrinth (in Russian)". demoscope.ru # 559-60, July 2013. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
  539. ^ a b Mikhalev, S. N (2000). Liudskie poteri v Velikoi Otechestvennoi voine 1941–1945 gg: Statisticheskoe issledovanie (Human Losses in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945 A Statistical Investigation). Krasnoiarskii gos. pedagog. universitet (Krasnoyarsk State Pedagogical University). pp. 18–23 ISBN 978-5-85981-082-6 (in Russian)
  540. ^ Hartmann, Christian (2013). Operation Barbarossa: Nazi Germany's War in the East, 1941–1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-19-966078-0.
  541. ^ Krivosheev 1997, p. 89.
  542. ^ a b Mikhalev, S. N (2000). Liudskie poteri v Velikoi Otechestvennoi voine 1941–1945 gg: Statisticheskoe issledovanie (Human Losses in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945 A Statistical Investigation). Krasnoiarskii gos. pedagog. universitet (Krasnoyarsk State Pedagogical University). pp. 22–23 ISBN 978-5-85981-082-6 (in Russian)
  543. ^ S. A. Il'enkov Pamyat O Millionach Pavshik Zaschitnikov Otechestva Nelzya Predavat Zabveniu Voennno-Istoricheskii Arkhiv No. 7 (22), Central Military Archives of the Russian Federation 2001, pp. 73–80; ISBN 978-5-89710-005-7 (The Memory of those who Fell Defending the Fatherland Cannot be Condemned to Oblivion); in Russian; available at the New York Public Library)
  544. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 465.
  545. ^ Perrie, Maureen (2006), The Cambridge History of Russia: The Twentieth Century, Cambridge University Press, p. 226 ISBN 9780521811446
  546. ^ Rossiiskaia Akademiia nauk. Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei. Sankt-Peterburg 1995; ISBN 5-86789-023-6, p. 158
  547. ^ a b Жертвы двух диктатур. Остарбайтеры и военнопленные в Третьем Рейхе и их репатриация. – М.: Ваш выбор ЦИРЗ, 1996. – pp. 735–38. (Victims of Two Dictatorships. Ostarbeiters and POW in Third Reich and Their Repatriation) (Russian)
  548. ^ Evdokimov, Rostislav, ed. (1 January 1995). Liudskie poteri SSSR v period vtoroi mirovoi voiny: sbornik statei Людские потери СССР в период второй мировой войны: сборник статей [Human Losses of the USSR during the Second World War: a collection of articles]. Saint Petersburg: Ин-т российской истории РАН (Russian Academy of Sciences). ISBN 978-5-86789-023-0.
  549. ^ Andreev, EM; Darski, LE; Kharkova, TL (11 September 2002). "Population dynamics: consequences of regular and irregular changes". In Lutz, Wolfgang; Scherbov, Sergei; Volkov, Andrei (eds.). Demographic Trends and Patterns in the Soviet Union Before 1991. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-85320-5.
  550. ^ David M. Glantz, Siege of Leningrad 1941 1944 Cassell 2001 ISBN 978-1-4072-2132-8 p.320
  551. ^ Andreev, E.M.; Darski, L.E.; Kharkova, T.L. (1993). Naselenie Sovetskogo Soiuza, 1922–1991. Moscow: Nauka. ISBN 978-5-02-013479-9. p. 85
  552. ^ Erlikman 2004.
  553. ^ Łuczak, Czesław. Szanse i trudnosci bilansu demograficznego Polski w latach 1939–1945. Dzieje Najnowsze Rocznik XXI. 1994. The losses in the former Polish eastern regions are also included in Poland's total war dead of 5.6 to 5.8 million
  554. ^ Gilbert, Martin. Atlas of the Holocaust. 1988. ISBN 978-0-688-12364-2
  555. ^ a b "L.L. Rybakovsky. Casualties of the USSR in the Great Patriotic War (in Russian), Sotsiologicheskie issiedovaniya, 2000, No. 6" (PDF).
  556. ^ G. F. Krivosheyev (1993) "Soviet Armed Forces Losses in Wars, Combat Operations and Military Conflicts: A Statistical Study". Military Publishing House Moscow. (Translated by U.S. government) p. 110 Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  557. ^ "OBD Memorial". Obd-memorial.ru. Archived from the original on 2012-05-10. Retrieved 2011-06-16.
  558. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 515.
  559. ^ Lennart Lundberg Handelsflottan under andra världskriget, p. 9
  560. ^ Jonathan E. Helmreich (Summer 2000). "The Bombing of Zurich". Aerospace Power Journal. Archived from the original on July 19, 2012. Retrieved March 4, 2016 – via Airpower.maxwell.af.mil.
  561. ^ Sorasanya Phaengspha (2002) The Indochina War: Thailand Fights France. Sarakadee Press.
  562. ^ Eiji Murashima, "The Commemorative Character of Thai Historiography: The 1942–43 Thai Military Campaign in the Shan States Depicted as a Story of National Salvation and the Restoration of Thai Independence" Modern Asian Studies, v40, n4 (2006) pp. 1053–96, p. 1057n: "Deaths in the Thai military forces from 8 December 1941 through the end of the war included 143 officers, 474 non-commissioned officers, and 4,942 soldiers. (Defense Ministry of Thailand, In Memory of Victims who Fell in Battle [in Thai], Bangkok: Krom phaenthi Thahanbok, 1947). With the exception of about 180 who died in the 8 December [1941] battles and another 150 who died in battles in the Shan states [Burma], almost all of the war dead died of malaria and other diseases."
  563. ^ E. Bruce Reynolds, "Aftermath of Alliance: The Wartime Legacy in Thai-Japanese Relations", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, v21, n1, March 1990, pp. 66–87. "An OSS document (XL 30948, RG 226, USNA) quotes Thai Ministry of Interior figures of 8,711 air raids deaths in 1944–45 and damage to more than 10,000 buildings, most of them totally destroyed. However, an account by M. R. Seni Pramoj (a typescript entitled "The Negotiations Leading to the Cessation of a State of War with Great Britain" and filed under Papers on World War II, at the Thailand Information Center, Chulalongkorn University, p. 12) indicates that only about 2,000 Thai died in air raids."
  564. ^ E. Bruce Reynolds, "Aftermath of Alliance: The Wartime Legacy in Thai-Japanese Relations", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, v21, n1, March 1990, pp. 66–87. Thailand exported rice to neighboring Japanese-occupied countries during 1942–45 (p 72n) and did not experience the notorious famines that occurred in India and French Indochina (see above) between 1943–44.
  565. ^ "Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2014-2015, p. 38". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 24 May 2016.Figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials
  566. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2013-2014 Archived 2015-11-04 at the Wayback Machine, page 44.
  567. ^ Marika Sherwood. "Colonies, Colonials and World War Two". BBC. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  568. ^ "Cyprus Veterans Association World War II". Cyprusveterans.com.cy. Archived from the original on March 9, 2016. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  569. ^ Marika Sherwood, World War II Colonies and Colonials. Savannah Press 2013; ISBN 978-0951972076, p. 15
  570. ^ a b "U.S. Coast Guard History". Uscg.mil. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  571. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 546.
  572. ^ "US Navy and Marine Corps Personnel Casualties in World War II". History.navy.mil. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  573. ^ "The National Archives Catalog". National Archives. August 15, 2016.
  574. ^ "American Battle Monuments Commission". Abmc.gov. Archived from the original on January 3, 2009. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  575. ^ a b "Mariners in "ocean-going service" during World War II have Veteran Status. They may be entitled to a gravestone, flag for their coffin, and burial in a National Cemetery". Usmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  576. ^ "American Merchant Marine at War". Usmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  577. ^ Summary of merchant marine personnel casualties, World War II. Washington. March 3, 1950. hdl:2027/mdp.39015082088017.
  578. ^ "U.S. Merchant Marine Casualties during World War II". Usmm.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  579. ^ "CAP History and Organization" (PDF). Civil Air Patrol. Retrieved February 27, 2011.
  580. ^ Center for Internee Rights, Civilian prisoners of the Japanese in the Philippine Islands Turner Press 2002; ISBN 1-56311-838-6
  581. ^ The annual death rate in 1942–1945 of Americans interned by Japan was about 3.5%. There were 1,536 deaths among the 13,996 interned civilians in 1942–45.
    The United States interned about 100,000 Japanese Americans between 1942–45. The 1946 report by the U.S. Dept. of The Interior "The Evacuated People a Quantitative Description" gave the annual death rate in 1942–1945 of Japanese detained in the U.S. at about 0.7%. There were 1,862 deaths among the 100,000 to 110,000 American civilians of Japanese ancestry interned in the U.S. in 1942–45. The annual death rate among the U.S. population as a whole in 1942–45 was about 1.1% per annum.
  582. ^ a b Clodfelter 2002, p. 552.
  583. ^ Roger Mansell (2012). Captured: The Forgotten Men of Guam. Naval Institute Press. pp. 27–. ISBN 978-1-61251-114-6.
  584. ^ Garfield, Brian (1982). The Thousand-Mile War: World War II in Alaska and the Aleutians. New York City: Bantam Books. pp. 56, 65, & 100. ISBN 0-5532-0308-8.
  585. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 580.
  586. ^ Robert Goralski, World War II Almanac, 1939–1945: a political and military record, New York, p. 428
  587. ^ Sir John Keegan Atlas of the Second World War, HarperCollins 1997, pp. 204–05
  588. ^ Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford University Press, 2001; ISBN 0-8047-3615-4, p. 733
  589. ^ a b c Danijela Nadj (1993). Yugoslavia manipulations with the number Second World War victims. Zagreb: Croatian Information Center. ISBN 978-0-919817-32-6. Archived from the original on August 8, 2020. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  590. ^ a b c U.S. Bureau of the Census. The Population of Yugoslavia (eds. Paul F. Meyers and Arthur A. Campbell), Washington, p. 23
  591. ^ Tomasevich, Jozo. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford University Press, 2001; ISBN 0-8047-3615-4, Cap. 17 Alleged and True Population Losses
  592. ^ a b c Kočović, Bogoljub Žrtve Drugog svetskog rata u Jugoslaviji, 1990; ISBN 86-01-01928-5, pp. 172–89
  593. ^ Danijela Nadj (1993). Yugoslavia manipulations with the number Second World War victims-The authors survey of the demographic and human war losses in Yugoslavia. Zagreb: Croatian Information Center. ISBN 978-0-919817-32-6. Archived from the original on August 8, 2020. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  594. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 737, . In Cap. 17 Alleged and True Population Losses there is a detailed account of the controversies related to Yugoslav war losses.
  595. ^ Statistics of Democide (1997).
  596. ^ Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford University Press. p. 729. ISBN 0-8047-3615-4.
  597. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 746.
  598. ^ "Croatian President Mesic Apologizes for Croatian Crimes Against the Jews during the Holocaust". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2016-03-06.
  599. ^ "JASENOVAC". USHMM. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  600. ^ "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Holocaust Encyclopedia: "Jasenovac"". Ushmm.org. Archived from the original on September 16, 2009. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  601. ^ a b Silberman, F. (2013). Memory and Postwar Memorials: Confronting the Violence of the Past. Springer. p. 79.
  602. ^ "JUSP Jasenovac - Stara Gradiška". www.jusp-jasenovac.hr. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  603. ^ Donald Kendrick, The Destiny of Europe's Gypsies. Basic Books, 1972; ISBN 0-465-01611-1, p. 184
  604. ^ Martin Gilbert Atlas of the Holocaust 1988; ISBN 0-688-12364-3, p. 244
  605. ^ Thomas M. Leonard, John F. Bratzel, George Lauderbaugh. Latin America in World War II, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers (September 11, 2006), p. 83

Further reading

External links