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VOA英语新闻听力2012年6月8日

论文作者:英语论文网论文属性:考试题 Examination登出时间:2012-06-20编辑:qiuqin点击率:10969

论文字数:8766论文编号:org201206201621424890语种:英语 English地区:中国价格:免费论文

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STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English. I'm Steve Ember.
 
This week marks the anniversary of the D-Day invasion of June sixth, nineteen forty-four. It  https://www.51lunwen.com/fengmian/ was largest amphibious assault in history, and it led to the end of World War Two in Europe. Allied forces stormed the beaches at Normandy, France. The invasion marked a turning point in the war in Europe, as Hitler's hold on the continent began to crumble. On today's MAKING OF A NATION we take you back to that event, beginning with a decision by the Allied Commander General Dwight David Eisenhower.
 
(MUSIC)
On June fifth, nineteen forty-four, a huge Allied force waited for the order to invade German-occupied France. The invasion had been planned for the day before. But a storm forced a delay.
 

Some of the first troops to hit the beach at Normandy, France, on June 6, 1944
 
At three-thirty in the morning, the Allied commander, General Dwight Eisenhower, was meeting with his aides. The storm still blew outside the building.
 
General Eisenhower and the other generals were discussing whether they should attack the next day.
 
 
General Dwight Eisenhower in March 1944 between British Air Chief Marshal Arthur Tedder, right, and Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery
 
A weatherman entered the room. He reported that the weather would soon improve. All eyes turned toward Eisenhower.
 
The decision was his. His face was serious. And for a long time he was silent. Finally he spoke. "Okay," he said. "We will go."
 
(MUSIC)
And so the largest military invasion ever known, D-Day, took place on June sixth, nineteen-forty-four.
 
The German leader, Adolph Hitler, had known the invasion was coming. But he did not know where the Allied force would strike.
 
Most Germans expected the Allies would attack at Calais. But they were wrong. Eisenhower planned to strike along the French coast of Normandy, across the English Channel.
 
The Second World War was then almost five years old. The Germans had won the early battles and gained control of most of Europe. But in nineteen forty-two and forty-three, the Allies slowly began to gain back land from the Germans in North Africa, Italy and Russia. And now, finally, the British, American, Canadian and other Allied forces felt strong enough to attack across the English Channel.
 
Eisenhower had one hundred fifty thousand men and twelve thousand planes for the attack. But most importantly, he had surprise on his side. Even after the invasion began, General Erwin Rommel and other German military leaders could not believe that the Allies had really attacked at Normandy.
 
But attack they did. On the night of June fifth, thousands of Allied soldiers parachuted behind German lines.
 
(SOUND)
Then Allied planes began dropping bombs on German defenses. And in the morning, thousands of ships approached the beaches, carrying men and supplies.
 
 
American troops lay low under the fire of Nazi guns on the beach of southern France on D-Day, June 6, 1944
 
The battle quickly became fierce and bloody. The Germans had strong defenses. They were better protected than the Allied troops on the beaches. But the Allied soldiers had greater numbers. Slowly they moved forward on one part of the coast, then anot论文英语论文网提供整理,提供论文代写英语论文代写代写论文代写英语论文代写留学生论文代写英文论文留学生论文代写相关核心关键词搜索。

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