WW2 More than 50 countries took part in World War II, the greatest and deadliest combat in human history, which was fought on land, at sea, and in the air in almost every continent. The war started when Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939 and raged across the globe until 1945, when Japan surrendered to the United States after atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The war, also known as the Second World War, was caused in part by the economic crisis of the Great Depression and by political tensions left unresolved after the end of World War I. Approximately 60 to 80 million people, including up to 55 million civilians, had perished by the end of World War II, and major cities in Europe and Asia was left in ruins. As part of Hitler's evil "Final Solution," now known as the Holocaust, 6 million Jews were slaughtered in Nazi concentration camps. The United Nations' founding as a peacekeeping organization and the geopolitical conflicts that led to the Cold War were two of the war's legacies.