The Washington War: FDR's Inner Circle and the Politics of Power That Won World War II
592The Washington War: FDR's Inner Circle and the Politics of Power That Won World War II
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Overview
The Washington War is the story of how the Second World War was fought and won in the capital’s halls of power—and how the United States, which in December 1941 had a nominal army and a decimated naval fleet, was able in only thirty months to fling huge forces onto the European continent and shortly thereafter shatter Imperial Japan’s Pacific strongholds.
Three quarters of a century after the overwhelming defeat of the totalitarian Axis forces, the terrifying, razor-thin calculus on which so many critical decisions turned has been forgotten—but had any of these debates gone the other way, the outcome of the war could have been far different: The army in August 1941, about to be disbanded, saved by a single vote. Production plans that would have delayed adequate war matériel for years after Pearl Harbor, circumvented by one uncompromising man’s courage and drive. The delicate ballet that precluded a separate peace between Stalin and Hitler. The almost-adopted strategy to stage D-Day at a fatally different time and place. It was all a breathtakingly close-run thing, again and again.
Renowned historian James Lacey takes readers behind the scenes in the cabinet rooms, the Pentagon, the Oval Office, and Hyde Park, and at the pivotal conferences—Campobello Island, Casablanca, Tehran—as these disputes raged. Here are colorful portraits of the great figures—and forgotten geniuses—of the day: New Dealers versus industrialists, political power brokers versus the generals, Churchill and the British high command versus the U.S. chiefs of staff, innovators versus entrenched bureaucrats . . . with the master manipulator, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, at the center, setting his brawling patriots one against the other and promoting and capitalizing on the furious turf wars.
Based on years of research and extensive, previously untapped archival resources, The Washington War is the first integrated, comprehensive chronicle of how all these elements—and towering personalities—clashed and ultimately coalesced at each vital turning point, the definitive account of Washington at real war and the titanic political and bureaucratic infighting that miraculously led to final victory.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780345547590 |
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Publisher: | Random House Publishing Group |
Publication date: | 05/28/2019 |
Sold by: | Random House |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 592 |
Sales rank: | 580,936 |
File size: | 46 MB |
Note: | This product may take a few minutes to download. |
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Chapter 1
Inching Toward War
In late September 1938, the world stood on the precipice of war. Japanese armies were on the march in China, and a revanchist Germany had set itself on a path aimed at overthrowing the World War I peace settlement, if need be by force of arms, and was engaged in a game of diplomatic brinkmanship with Britain and France over the fate of Czechoslovakia. When, at the last moment, Britain and France infamously blinked and handed the Sudetenland over to the Third Reich in exchange for Hitler’s promise of European peace, an ebullient Neville Chamberlain, British prime minister, returned from the Munich Conference to the cheers of a rapturous public. It was left to Winston Churchill to throw water on the celebration, commenting, “The government had a choice between shame and war. It chose shame; it will get war.”
On the other side of the Atlantic, President Franklin Roosevelt, like Churchill, was acutely aware that another European conflict was looming, and that America needed to start preparing for war. This was a complete reversal from the early days of Roosevelt’s presidency when he planned draconian reductions to the Army’s budget. The distraught Army chief of staff at the time, Douglas MacArthur, had bitterly opposed the cuts, later recounting that he had shouted at the president that “when we lost the next war, and an American boy, lying in the mud with an enemy bayonet through his belly and an enemy foot on his dying throat, spat out his last curse, I wanted the name not to be MacArthur, but Roosevelt.” A livid Roosevelt icily replied: “You must not talk that way to the President.” The exchange likely saved the Army from complete ruin, but the budget axe could not be avoided entirely during the Great Depression, when FDR had more pressing domestic uses for those funds.
Years of neglect had left the U.S. Army little more than an underfunded constabulary force. As the Munich Conference drew to a conclusion, Roosevelt knew it was past time to rehabilitate American military power; he was already wondering if it was too late. His instincts, as always, were to move rapidly upon his objective and seize the commanding ground before his opponents could mobilize to beat him. But he was leading a nation still mired in the Great Depression and a people who passionately believed that Europe’s problems were not their concern. Roosevelt, always acutely attuned to the voter’s psyche, understood that if he was going to move America toward war it needed to be done gradually and with a great deal of subterfuge. Later he would explain to his son James why he had lied to the American people about the likelihood of America entering the war: “I could not come out and say a war was coming, because the people would have panicked and turned from me. I had to educate the people to the inevitable, gradually, step-by-step, laying the groundwork for the programs which would allow us to prepare for the war that was drawing us into it.”
Although most Americans fervently believed that Great Britain had led them into the First World War through trickery and propaganda, the British did not stand alone in the docket. Americans also held industrialists and bankers, whom they perceived as having reinforced British manipulations, just as guilty. In September 1934, only a few months after MacArthur’s run-in with the president, North Dakota senator Gerald Nye stood before the Senate to condemn the banking and munitions industries as “merchants of death” motivated only by greed, who had pressured President Woodrow Wilson into entering the Great War. A steady diet of such innuendo and lies sparked a surge of isolationism and overwhelming public support for a series of neutrality laws, the first passed in 1935, that made it illegal for the United States to trade with “any” warring power, ostensibly to keep America from being dragged into the next European conflict.
But there were a few men, close to the president, who saw the threat posed by Hitler as clearly as Roosevelt did. Over time, this group would grow and coalesce into an internal government pressure group—tagged by the press as the “all-outers”—who increasingly prodded and coaxed Roosevelt to do more to help the Allied cause and to prepare the nation for war. One of the first of this group, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, managed to convince the president to risk getting ahead of public opinion and take a tentative first step toward breaking free of the Neutrality Acts by making a speech on the need for international cooperation. Moreover, he persuaded FDR to make the speech in a large city firmly entrenched in isolationism: Chicago. A year before the Munich Conference, on October 5, 1937, Roosevelt told a large crowd, “The present reign of terror and international lawlessness . . . has reached a stage where the very foundations of civilization are seriously threatened.” He then asked for the peaceful nations of the world to unite to “quarantine” the aggressors.
The reaction to what was quickly branded Roosevelt’s “Quarantine Speech” had been immediate and violent. Every major pacifist organization—and in 1937 there were already a great number of them—attacked what they all perceived as a first step toward war. Leading the outcry were the vehemently anti-Roosevelt Hearst and McCormick newspaper chains. But before the week was out, even the Veterans of Foreign Wars had launched a petition drive with the goal of collecting twenty-five million signatures to “Keep America Out of War.” Stunned by the speed and virulence of the public reaction, Roosevelt pulled back from his comments. In a press conference a couple of days later he dodged the issue by stating that he was not advocating any set program or policy. Rather he was trying to set an attitude.
Sumner Welles, the number two man in the State Department and a close Roosevelt intimate, described the president as “dismayed by the widespread violence of the attacks.” Welles’s impression likely did not reflect Roosevelt’s deeper thoughts. Such attacks rarely dimmed Roosevelt’s essential optimism for long, as was apparent a few days later when he told Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes—who also functioned as his political attack dog—“I frankly thought there would be more criticism and I verily believe that . . . we can slowly but surely make people believe that war is a greater danger to us if we close all of our doors and windows.” Nor did he seem much concerned with the continuing attacks of the isolationist press, writing to Welles, “Frankly I do not believe any of these newspapers carry any particular weight as expressions of public opinion.”
Roosevelt was a master of an attack-and-retreat style of politics, adept at first offering a new initiative, gauging the resistance, then temporarily withdrawing to formulate the best way forward. Although he clearly pulled back from taking any substantive action after the speech, this was part of a pattern Roosevelt would repeat many times over the next two years. After each such retreat, he would sit patiently, waiting for another opportunity—always sure one would come—to make his next provocative statement. Even when polls demonstrated clear majorities supporting his position, Roosevelt continued to move cautiously, waiting weeks or months before once again pushing his agenda forward. As war edged closer these tactics drove the growing number of “all-outers” in his government to distraction, but Roosevelt recognized that public support was much wider than it was deep. He was clearly playing a long game, while he waited for America to conclude what he already knew: war was coming.
Table of Contents
The Washington Warriors xiii
Preface xix
Part 1 Preparing the Battlefield
1 Inching Toward War 3
2 Wars Are Won in the Details 11
3 Roosevelt Finds a War Consigliere 14
4 Early Maneuvers 22
5 Hot Dogs at Hyde Park 30
Part 2 Opening Rounds
6 First Salvos 37
7 The State Department at War … with Itself 43
8 Blitzkrieg 54
9 Roosevelt's General 59
10 A Reluctant Industrial Complex 65
11 The Sphinx 70
12 Republicans Seize the War Department 79
13 Your Boys Are Not Going to be Sent into Any Foreign Wars 88
14 Business Gets Its Field Marshals 96
15 Bankrolling Britain 111
16 Colors Become Rainbows 127
17 Hamlet Finds an Admiral 135
18 Drang Nach Osten 144
19 Rendezvous at Sea 151
20 Production Battles 158
21 War in the Pacific 170
Part 3 The Beginning
22 A City at War 187
23 Churchill Comes to Town-Arcadia Conference 196
24 Bureaucratic Roadkill 213
25 A Bitter Season 223
26 Joint Chiefs 233
27 Striking Back 242
28 Deserting the Bear 252
29 Stopping the Tide 258
30 On Track 269
31 The Great Feasibility Dispute 279
32 No Rubber, No War 290
Part 4 New Fronts
33 Torch 303
34 New Hands at the Helm 310
35 Byrnes Cast Upon Troubled Waters 325
36 A Non-United Front 336
37 Casablanca 343
38 Man-And Woman-Power 356
39 The Jewish Question 371
40 Auld Lang Syne 386
41 Storm Clouds Over The Alliance 394
42 Showdown in Quebec 408
Part 5 Endgame
43 The Big Three in Tehran 419
44 The Grind 435
45 Election 1944: Surveying The Field 440
46 Pacific Overtures 448
47 The Morgenthau Plan 453
48 The Champ 464
49 Yalta and the End 467
Acknowledgments 477
Source Notes 479
Bibliography 523
Photograph Credits 539
Index 543