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I hope the United States
will keep out of this war.
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I believe that it will.
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And I give you assurance and reassurance
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that every effort of your government
will be directed toward that end.
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As long as it remains
within my power to prevent,
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there will be no blackout of peace
in the United States.
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After World War I
there was a surge of isolationism,
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a feeling we had no reason
to become involved in World War I
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and we'd made a mistake
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and there were a lot of debts owed
by European countries,
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and the country went isolationist.
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I haven't the slightest idea
of European affairs.
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—Let Europe fight their own battles.
—War? Not for me.
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This time America should keep out—
and I know I will.
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If war breaks out in Europe,
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this country should heed the advice
of its first president
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and avoid all foreign entanglement.
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(narrator) In early 1940, Britain's
ambassador in Washington reported
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that nine out of ten Americans
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were determined
to keep America out of the war.
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A few, like the American Nazi Party,
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even wanted America
to aid Britain's enemies.
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(speaking German)
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(man shouts)
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(man) The country
was enormously divided.
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There was the America First movement,
which was advocating isolationism;
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on the other hand there was
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the Committee to Defend America
by Aiding the Allies.
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We had these curious voices
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such as Charles Lindbergh's,
the voices of isolationism.
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In the past, we have dealt with a Europe
dominated by England and France.
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In the future, we may have to deal
with a Europe dominated by Germany.
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(Ball) Charles Lindbergh,
thanks to his extraordinary exploit,
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was a very popular figure—
he was almost a folk hero.
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So he would have influence.
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I suppose that celebrities
of all characters have influence,
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otherwise they wouldn't be
endorsing products all the time.
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(Lindbergh) …but it should not involve
the internal affairs of Europe.
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They never were, and never will be,
carried on according to our desires.
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(applause)
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There was a strong
anti-British antipathy
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in certain parts of the country.
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It was felt that Britain
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was trying very hard
to drag us into its war.
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(marching band music)
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(narrator) 1940 was presidential
election year in the United States
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and Roosevelt's main concern that summer
was to get himself re-elected.
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Ladies and gentlemen,
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the 22nd convention of the
Republican Party will now come to order.
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Even as we meet,
lights are going out in Europe.
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Blackouts of dictators
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take the place
of lighthouses of free men.
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Ours is the grave responsibility
to preserve the lighthouses of liberty.
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In the name…
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of the people…
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of the whole United States…
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I place in nomination…
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that valiant American…
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt!
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(narrator) After France's fall,
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most Americans were disposed
to aid Britain in some way,
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but still more were strongly opposed
to entering the war on Britain's side.
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(Willkie) …third-term candidate
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has not kept faith
with the American people.
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(narrator) Roosevelt's opponent
in the election that autumn
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was an out-and-out anti-war candidate,
Wendell Willkie.
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(Willkie) If his promise
to keep our boys out of foreign wars
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is no better than his promise
to balance the budget,
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they're already
almost on the transports.
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(narrator) But with the Nazis
triumphant everywhere,
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Roosevelt couldn't afford
to wait to be re-elected
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before putting America
on some sort of war footing.
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(Roosevelt) The Congress
has debated without partisanship
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and has now enacted a law
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establishing a selective method
of augmenting our armed forces.
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We must, and we will,
marshal our great potential strength
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to fend off war from our shores.
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(man) More than 16 million
young Americans
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are reviving the 300-year-old
American custom of the muster,
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by which,
from the earliest colonial times,
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every able-bodied citizen
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was subject to the call for service
in the national defence.
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The first number
drawn by the secretary of war
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is serial number 158.
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(cheering)
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I am honoured
to be one of those first called
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and I'll try very hard
to make a real good soldier.
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And I'm proud of you.
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(Willkie) If you elect me
president of the United States,
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I shall never send an American boy
to fight in any European war.
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I consider it a public duty
to answer falsifications with facts.
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I will not pretend
that I find this an unpleasant duty.
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(laughter)
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I am an old campaigner
and I love a good fight.
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(cheering)
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(narrator)
Roosevelt got his good fight,
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though to stay in the race
he had promised, like his opponent,
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not to send American boys
to fight in foreign wars.
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—Name, please?
—Franklin D Roosevelt.
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(narrator) November 5, 1940,
was election day,
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and by midnight America's choice
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of president for another four years
was clear.
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(man) The results are now conclusive—
Roosevelt wins.
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(cheering)
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(narrator) Now Roosevelt
felt he had a mandate
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to give Britain all aid short of war.
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But he moved slowly,
for America was still deeply divided.
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(Corwin) Many of the war measures,
such as steps to give aid to Britain
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at the time when England
was standing alone and was beleaguered,
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just squeaked by in Congress.
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Even a programme of armament,
of military preparedness,
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got through Congress
on very, very close votes,
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one-vote margins
in a total of 400 votes.
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(Harriman) Then the extraordinary
legislation, Lend-Lease,
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was proposed in December of 1940
and became law in March of '41,
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and under that the president
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did everything he possibly could
to give aid to Britain.
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My instructions
when I went over to represent him
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were very simple, very brief.
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They were to contact
the British government
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to find out what we could do
to help Britain—short of war.
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And we began at once
doing all sorts of things
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which were not really neutral
under the literal interpretation—
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for instance, we were preparing
British naval vessels in American ports
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and we escorted convoys
across the Atlantic as far as Iceland,
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and we transferred
two million tons of ships.
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The immediate problem was to get people
to understand what it was.
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In this, I think Mr Roosevelt's
very simple analogy
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of lending your neighbour a fire hose
when there's a fire
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was a most persuasive
simple illustration.
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(Roosevelt) The people of Europe
who are defending themselves
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do not ask us to do their fighting.
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They ask us for the implements of war—
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the planes, the tanks,
the guns, the freighters—
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which will enable them to fight
for their liberty and our security.
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We must be
the great arsenal of democracy.
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For us, this is an emergency
as serious as war itself.
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In those days, the business community
regarded Roosevelt
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as, at a minimum,
a major deputy of the devil,
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and Roosevelt was deeply suspicious
of the businessmen,
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so that the people who were associated
with the mobilising of the war
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had a divided interest.
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Some of them felt that their
main purpose in being in Washington
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was to put a curb on the
socialist excesses of the New Deal.
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Some of them
were uneasy about being there—
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they had the feeling of people who were
playing in an orchestra in a brothel.
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And there was
also a great unwillingness…
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We hear now
about the military-industrial complex—
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in those days
there was a great unwillingness
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to convert from civilian industry.
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There was a feeling that war production
would be a very unprofitable business,
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it would lose markets for automobiles,
for tyres, for chemicals, and so forth.
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(Galbraith) There was a problem
with some of the unions
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up until June of 1941.
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Until Russia was in the war,
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and in the days of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact,
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there was foot-dragging on the part
of some of the union leaders.
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And there were strikes.
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(narrator) Four times as many workers
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were on strike in 1941
as in the year before.
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That spring, nearly half a million
coal miners struck for almost a month,
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while on the west coast a walk-out
that summer at North American Aviation
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delayed deliveries of planes to Britain
for several weeks.
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It took troops
to get production moving again.
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But although Roosevelt was still
reluctant to lead America into war,
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the war was now
catching up with America.
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June 11th, 1941: an American freighter,
the Robin Moor, was sunk by a U-boat.
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Roosevelt used this as a pretext
for occupying Iceland
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and relieving
the British garrisons there.
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September 4th: a US destroyer, Greer,
was attacked by a U-boat near Iceland.
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Roosevelt now told his navy
to shoot on sight.
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October 16th: the US destroyer Kearney
was struck by a German torpedo
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while escorting a convoy in mid-Atlantic
and 11 of her crew were killed.
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Roosevelt used this incident
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to push through Congress
the repeal of the Neutrality Act.
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We have wished to avoid shooting.
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But the shooting has started.
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And history has recorded
who fired the first shot.
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In the long run, however,
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all that will matter
is who fired the last shot.
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(applause)
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The repeal of our Neutrality Act will be
the last step on the road to war.
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If we load our ships
with contraband of war
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and send them into combat zones,
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they will most certainly be sunk.
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And that means war—a war
which in the opinion of many of us,
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although designed
to save democracy abroad,
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will surely destroy it at home
right here in America.
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(narrator) On October 30
the US destroyer Reuben James was sunk
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with the loss of 115 lives.
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Officers and all hands forward perished.
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Myself and 45 men
are all that are alive.
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(narrator)
Despite pressure from Churchill,
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who dearly wanted America in the war,
Roosevelt now did nothing.
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00:14:33,280 --> 00:14:37,400
It was clear it would take much more
than the drowning of 100 or so US seamen
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to bring America into the war.
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There was even a sentiment—
I remember this being expressed—
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to the effect that England
would fight to the last American.
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There were steps that were developing—
gradual steps, to be sure—
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somewhat comparable to the steps
that took place in World War I.
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One incident after another—the
torpedoing of the Sussex got us excited,
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then there was the Lusitania episode…
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00:15:03,320 --> 00:15:07,760
In the same way, I think that with the
moves that Mr Roosevelt was making,
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the cash-and-carry programme
that he had,
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00:15:11,680 --> 00:15:16,320
the protection of the convoys,
the destroyer deal…
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One thing and another was occurring
that would be apt to produce, I think,
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an incident that would set the war off.
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(narrator) That incident was massive
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and it came in an unexpected place:
Pearl Harbour.
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(radio) All army and navy bases
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on the island of Oahu in Hawaii
are now under air attack.
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For the latest news,
keep tuned to this station.
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(Galbraith)
My superior, who was in charge
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00:15:41,760 --> 00:15:44,760
of all civilian operations
of the war, was away,
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00:15:44,840 --> 00:15:49,440
so I was then sent on to the
great meeting of the wartime leaders
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that convened in Washington
on the night of Pearl Harbour.
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I remember my sense of mission
in going to that meeting.
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We had all seen the war coming.
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00:16:01,080 --> 00:16:03,080
Here was the day and here was the hour,
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00:16:03,160 --> 00:16:07,520
and here was I, attending the meeting
with the other great men.
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We got to the meeting and the
other “great men”—myself included—
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were one hell of a disappointment,
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because nobody could think
of anything to say or do.
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00:16:17,320 --> 00:16:18,840
It seemed a good idea to see
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00:16:18,920 --> 00:16:22,920
what materials were threatened
by the Japanese advance.
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00:16:23,000 --> 00:16:25,920
Everybody was coming in
during the course of this,
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00:16:26,000 --> 00:16:30,360
some in sport jackets,
some in tennis shoes,
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00:16:30,440 --> 00:16:36,120
and it became terribly evident
that nobody had any real information
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00:16:36,200 --> 00:16:39,480
as to where
these strategic commodities came from.
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00:16:39,560 --> 00:16:44,000
And eventually the whole discussion
bogged down, I remember,
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00:16:44,080 --> 00:16:46,160
on the question of kapok.
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00:16:46,240 --> 00:16:52,640
Kapok, everybody thought… It was
clearly listed as a strategic material,
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00:16:52,720 --> 00:16:55,520
it evidently came
from that part of the world,
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00:16:55,600 --> 00:16:59,560
and nobody could think, for God's sake,
what the stuff was used for.
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00:16:59,640 --> 00:17:02,160
(sirens)
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I ask that the Congress declare
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that since the unprovoked
and dastardly attack by Japan
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on Sunday December 7, 1941,
239
00:17:26,360 --> 00:17:31,680
a state of war has existed
240
00:17:31,760 --> 00:17:36,600
between the United States
and the Japanese empire.
241
00:17:36,680 --> 00:17:39,320
(applause)
242
00:17:39,400 --> 00:17:44,800
(narrator) Even now Roosevelt didn't
ask that the US declare war on Germany—
243
00:17:44,880 --> 00:17:48,960
although Britain had already allied
herself with the US against Japan.
244
00:17:49,040 --> 00:17:51,920
But Hitler decided for him.
245
00:17:52,960 --> 00:17:57,600
For some unexplained reason, Hitler
declared war on the United States,
246
00:17:57,680 --> 00:18:00,880
which relieved Roosevelt
of all of his difficulties.
247
00:18:00,960 --> 00:18:05,360
I was practising law in Chicago—
that is, at the time of Pearl Harbour—
248
00:18:05,440 --> 00:18:09,240
and I can tell you that if Hitler
had not made this decision,
249
00:18:09,320 --> 00:18:12,120
if he had simply done nothing,
250
00:18:12,200 --> 00:18:15,720
that there would have been
enormous sentiment
251
00:18:15,800 --> 00:18:21,360
in many parts of the United States
that the Pacific war now was our war,
252
00:18:21,440 --> 00:18:24,760
that the European war
was for the Europeans
253
00:18:24,840 --> 00:18:28,280
and we should concentrate
all our efforts against the Japanese.
254
00:18:38,000 --> 00:18:40,800
♪ Oh, give me land, lots of land
255
00:18:40,880 --> 00:18:43,720
♪ Under starry skies above
256
00:18:43,800 --> 00:18:46,360
♪ Don't fence me in
257
00:18:46,440 --> 00:18:51,120
♪ Let me ride through
the wide open country that I love
258
00:18:51,200 --> 00:18:53,040
♪ Don't fence me in
259
00:18:53,120 --> 00:18:56,280
(Corwin) People sold their homes
at a fraction of their value,
260
00:18:56,360 --> 00:19:00,240
they were certain the west coast would
be under attack, that we'd be bombed.
261
00:19:00,320 --> 00:19:02,960
There were even blackouts
along the west coast,
262
00:19:03,040 --> 00:19:05,000
as there were along the east coast.
263
00:19:05,080 --> 00:19:08,160
And there were even
some false alerts here.
264
00:19:08,240 --> 00:19:10,480
(air-raid siren)
265
00:19:28,440 --> 00:19:33,200
(narrator) Not everybody
took these precautions seriously.
266
00:19:46,160 --> 00:19:48,920
To European eyes, America's going to war
267
00:19:49,000 --> 00:19:53,040
had moments both ludicrous and familiar.
268
00:20:05,520 --> 00:20:09,480
(♪ “When Johnny
Comes Marching Home”)
269
00:20:29,040 --> 00:20:31,360
♪ The men will cheer
and the boys will shout
270
00:20:31,440 --> 00:20:33,360
♪ The ladies they will all turn out
271
00:20:33,440 --> 00:20:35,480
♪ And we'll all feel gay
272
00:20:35,560 --> 00:20:39,280
♪ When Johnny comes marching home
273
00:20:39,360 --> 00:20:42,880
Living among us
are those we call aliens.
274
00:20:43,600 --> 00:20:49,040
We must remember
that our parents or our grandparents
275
00:20:49,120 --> 00:20:51,560
or our great-grandparents
276
00:20:51,640 --> 00:20:55,480
all were aliens in their day.
277
00:20:55,560 --> 00:21:01,840
If you believe you have knowledge
of any improper activity of any alien
278
00:21:01,920 --> 00:21:06,320
you should report the fact
to the nearest FBI office.
279
00:21:06,400 --> 00:21:09,880
Don't try to be the law yourself.
280
00:21:13,240 --> 00:21:14,880
There was a tremendous change—
281
00:21:14,960 --> 00:21:17,600
the change being
that we were the same individuals
282
00:21:17,680 --> 00:21:19,440
as prior to December 7;
283
00:21:19,520 --> 00:21:23,960
on December 8, when we went to school,
many of our classmates and friends
284
00:21:24,040 --> 00:21:28,080
called us “dirty Japs”,
teased us, harassed us,
285
00:21:28,160 --> 00:21:31,520
and our so-called friends
were no longer friends.
286
00:21:31,600 --> 00:21:35,360
In the First World War, as you know,
the Germans were hated thoroughly
287
00:21:35,440 --> 00:21:37,800
and there was a great deal
of discrimination
288
00:21:37,880 --> 00:21:39,560
and harassment of the Germans.
289
00:21:39,640 --> 00:21:43,600
In the Second World War, we were at war
with three different nationalities,
290
00:21:43,680 --> 00:21:46,000
the Italians, the Germans
and the Japanese.
291
00:21:46,080 --> 00:21:48,400
And I remember that Thomas Mann
292
00:21:48,480 --> 00:21:51,560
and Bruno Walter
spoke up for the Germans
293
00:21:51,640 --> 00:21:55,720
and said they couldn't be removed
because that would be the last despair,
294
00:21:55,800 --> 00:21:59,840
having fled Nazi Germany, to be
again put into a concentration camp.
295
00:21:59,920 --> 00:22:02,840
And Joe DiMaggio's mother spoke up,
296
00:22:02,920 --> 00:22:06,440
and that was very moving,
in San Francisco.
297
00:22:06,520 --> 00:22:08,960
But the Japanese had really nobody.
298
00:22:14,320 --> 00:22:16,240
I think picking on the Japanese
299
00:22:16,320 --> 00:22:21,920
was partly a logistically rational thing
that the army could handle—
300
00:22:22,000 --> 00:22:28,120
they said, we can't handle the Germans,
but we can handle the Japanese.
301
00:22:28,200 --> 00:22:31,920
After all, they couldn't have moved
all the Germans and Italians—
302
00:22:32,000 --> 00:22:33,560
they would have had to move
303
00:22:33,640 --> 00:22:37,320
half the people out of New York.
It would've been ridiculous.
304
00:22:40,560 --> 00:22:42,920
(Ball) These people
had always been unpopular
305
00:22:43,000 --> 00:22:48,160
because they competed with the American
farmers in truck gardening and so on,
306
00:22:48,240 --> 00:22:49,680
and worked very much harder
307
00:22:49,760 --> 00:22:52,720
and cultivated their land
very much more efficiently.
308
00:22:52,800 --> 00:22:56,400
So a lot of people
took advantage of their situation
309
00:22:56,480 --> 00:22:58,880
to create antipathy toward them.
310
00:22:58,960 --> 00:23:01,720
And the government
acted hastily and rather brutally
311
00:23:01,800 --> 00:23:03,760
—it's not a very attractive chapter.
312
00:23:03,840 --> 00:23:07,880
(narrator) More than 100,000 Japanese
Americans were interned en masse,
313
00:23:07,960 --> 00:23:10,040
mostly those on the west coast,
314
00:23:10,120 --> 00:23:15,240
whereas the 600,000 German and Italian
Americans were treated individually.
315
00:23:15,320 --> 00:23:18,360
(Uno) Although we had heard rumours
of an evacuation,
316
00:23:18,440 --> 00:23:22,920
we didn't realise
that it was going to indeed take place.
317
00:23:23,000 --> 00:23:27,760
We were told that we could
only take what we could carry.
318
00:23:29,160 --> 00:23:33,080
Evacuees had three choices:
they either had to sell their property,
319
00:23:33,160 --> 00:23:35,320
abandon it or store it.
320
00:23:35,400 --> 00:23:38,920
And in many cases, because
of the uncertainty of the situation,
321
00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:42,920
many people just disposed of their
property as best they could.
322
00:23:43,000 --> 00:23:47,640
We were then put on buses
and taken to assembly centres.
323
00:23:50,520 --> 00:23:52,280
From the assembly centres
324
00:23:52,360 --> 00:23:56,520
we lived in horse stalls
or in quickly made tarpaper barracks.
325
00:23:56,600 --> 00:23:59,320
The mental anguish
that my mother went through,
326
00:23:59,400 --> 00:24:03,400
having four of her sons in the service
of the United States government
327
00:24:03,480 --> 00:24:07,720
and having her husband
labelled a dangerous enemy alien…
328
00:24:17,840 --> 00:24:21,080
We had guards, watch towers,
machine guns…
329
00:24:21,160 --> 00:24:24,560
It was a picture of incarceration.
330
00:24:24,640 --> 00:24:28,040
We felt that we were prisoners—
prisoners in our own country.
331
00:25:07,240 --> 00:25:10,080
It was certain
there'd be no more rubber for a while
332
00:25:10,160 --> 00:25:13,560
and we'd have to make do with the stock
of rubber tyres that we had.
333
00:25:13,640 --> 00:25:17,600
And it wasn't in the authority of our
agency to stop the sale of rubber tyres,
334
00:25:17,680 --> 00:25:19,520
so we drew up an order anyway
335
00:25:19,600 --> 00:25:22,720
and we had an anonymous young man
circulate it
336
00:25:22,800 --> 00:25:29,240
in the Office of Production Management
that had to clear all pieces of paper.
337
00:25:29,320 --> 00:25:33,840
Walked in, with “Here's the tyre order,
sir.” Everybody signed it.
338
00:25:38,720 --> 00:25:42,960
And we froze the whole nation's
stock of rubber tyres.
339
00:26:13,720 --> 00:26:15,600
Everybody got work.
340
00:26:15,680 --> 00:26:20,360
This was very much appreciated after
the long, deep depression of the 1930s.
341
00:26:20,440 --> 00:26:23,520
You might've thought inflation
would be the major problem,
342
00:26:23,600 --> 00:26:27,040
because in most countries, in most wars,
it's been a major problem.
343
00:26:27,120 --> 00:26:29,720
But very early we mobilised,
344
00:26:29,800 --> 00:26:34,440
we put in a rationing, and, although
there was a small amount of grumbling,
345
00:26:34,520 --> 00:26:37,640
it's amazing how well
the rationing system worked.
346
00:26:37,720 --> 00:26:42,280
(Galbraith) There was a tendency
to accept shortages with one exception.
347
00:26:42,360 --> 00:26:46,360
People were very resistant
to gasoline rationing.
348
00:26:46,440 --> 00:26:51,360
Clothing shortages, food shortages,
coffee, sugar, people would accept.
349
00:26:51,440 --> 00:26:58,000
But there was no form of
rascality, chicanery, thievery, larceny
350
00:26:58,080 --> 00:27:01,920
that people wouldn't engage in
to get extra gasoline.
351
00:27:02,000 --> 00:27:05,240
I think the thing they most resented
352
00:27:05,320 --> 00:27:09,400
was the extreme youth
of many of us who were doing it.
353
00:27:09,480 --> 00:27:11,840
The Office of Price Administration,
354
00:27:11,920 --> 00:27:15,120
as I look back on it,
must've been very hard to take.
355
00:27:15,200 --> 00:27:17,840
I was then 31.
356
00:27:17,920 --> 00:27:22,880
David Ginsberg, my immediate associate,
general counsel, was 29,
357
00:27:22,960 --> 00:27:27,080
and most everybody else
was younger than we were—
358
00:27:27,160 --> 00:27:28,600
including Richard Nixon,
359
00:27:28,680 --> 00:27:31,760
who was one of the more
obscure employees of the agency.
360
00:27:31,840 --> 00:27:35,480
There's a famous wartime picture
of Sewell Avery,
361
00:27:35,560 --> 00:27:37,760
a great tycoon of the last age,
362
00:27:37,840 --> 00:27:41,440
who was head of Montgomery Ward
and brought it out of the Depression,
363
00:27:41,520 --> 00:27:45,240
being carried out of his office
by two American soldiers in uniform
364
00:27:45,320 --> 00:27:49,560
because he wouldn't comply
with the War Labor Board.
365
00:27:49,640 --> 00:27:53,800
Our war programme
for the coming fiscal year
366
00:27:53,880 --> 00:27:58,960
will cost 56 billion dollars.
367
00:27:59,040 --> 00:28:03,800
That means taxes and bonds…
368
00:28:03,880 --> 00:28:06,640
and bonds and taxes.
369
00:28:06,720 --> 00:28:10,280
—Ohh…
—We have a squeal with each orchid.
370
00:28:12,880 --> 00:28:16,640
Want to get your orchid?
Come this way, please.
371
00:28:17,480 --> 00:28:19,960
2250. This is really
a handsome thing to have.
372
00:28:20,040 --> 00:28:23,440
You're getting this
as a premium for a war bond for $2250,
373
00:28:23,520 --> 00:28:25,880
so it's really a good purchase
for anybody.
374
00:28:25,960 --> 00:28:28,160
Let's have a look at that.
375
00:28:28,240 --> 00:28:32,120
Hope is looking at the shoe.
He may increase his bid to $2255.
376
00:28:32,200 --> 00:28:34,080
(laughter)
377
00:28:34,160 --> 00:28:37,040
You're going to come up a little,
aren't you, flabby?
378
00:28:37,120 --> 00:28:38,720
(laughter)
379
00:28:38,800 --> 00:28:41,720
I shouldn't, but I'll go 25.
380
00:28:42,640 --> 00:28:48,120
Our enemies aren't pushovers.
They're savage, skilful and relentless.
381
00:28:48,200 --> 00:28:51,800
They've trained for years for
just this chance to enslave the world,
382
00:28:51,880 --> 00:28:56,120
and that's just what they intend to do.
And they'll use every trick and tool.
383
00:28:56,200 --> 00:29:00,480
But on the other hand,
they aren't supermen.
384
00:29:00,560 --> 00:29:03,600
They didn't come down from Mars.
385
00:29:03,680 --> 00:29:07,000
They can be licked
and they will be licked.
386
00:29:07,080 --> 00:29:08,680
By men.
387
00:29:08,760 --> 00:29:10,960
(cheering)
388
00:29:11,040 --> 00:29:13,160
♪ We fought in 1917
389
00:29:13,240 --> 00:29:15,200
♪ Rum-di-di dum dum dum
390
00:29:15,280 --> 00:29:17,760
♪ And drove the tyrants from the sea
391
00:29:17,840 --> 00:29:19,760
♪ Rum did-di dum dum dum
392
00:29:19,840 --> 00:29:22,080
♪ We're in a bigger, better war
393
00:29:22,160 --> 00:29:24,280
♪ For your patriotic pastime
394
00:29:24,360 --> 00:29:28,520
♪ We don't know what we're fighting for
But we didn't know the last time
395
00:29:28,600 --> 00:29:31,240
♪ So load the cannon,
draw the blade
396
00:29:31,320 --> 00:29:33,120
♪ Rum-di-di dum dum dum
397
00:29:33,200 --> 00:29:38,040
♪ Come on and join the big parade…
398
00:29:41,680 --> 00:29:45,680
♪ Rum-di-di dum dum, rum-di-di dum dum,
rum-di-di dum dum dum
399
00:29:45,760 --> 00:29:48,120
♪ Let the drums roll out
400
00:29:48,200 --> 00:29:50,160
♪ Let the trumpets call
401
00:29:50,240 --> 00:29:52,160
♪ While the people shout
402
00:29:52,240 --> 00:29:54,160
♪ Strike up the band
403
00:29:54,240 --> 00:29:56,520
It was the airplanes
of the treacherous foe
404
00:29:56,600 --> 00:29:58,600
that brought my husband to his death,
405
00:29:58,680 --> 00:30:02,160
and if I can qualify
as an airplane worker at Vega
406
00:30:02,240 --> 00:30:04,600
and with my hands
help to keep 'em flying,
407
00:30:04,680 --> 00:30:07,040
I will feel
that I am carrying on for him.
408
00:30:07,120 --> 00:30:09,000
♪ Hear the cymbals ring
409
00:30:09,080 --> 00:30:11,200
♪ Calling one and all
410
00:30:11,280 --> 00:30:13,160
♪ To the martial swing
411
00:30:13,240 --> 00:30:15,400
♪ Strike up the band
412
00:30:15,480 --> 00:30:17,640
♪ There is work to be done, to be done
413
00:30:17,720 --> 00:30:19,720
♪ There's a war to be won, to be won
414
00:30:19,800 --> 00:30:22,080
♪ Come, you son of a, son of a gun
415
00:30:22,160 --> 00:30:24,520
♪ Take your stand
416
00:30:24,600 --> 00:30:26,520
♪ Fall in line, yea a bow
417
00:30:26,600 --> 00:30:29,320
♪ Come along, let's go
418
00:30:29,400 --> 00:30:32,280
♪ Hey, leader, strike up the band
419
00:30:32,360 --> 00:30:33,880
We are doing our share,
420
00:30:33,960 --> 00:30:37,680
but we're going to do
infinitely more than we have done.
421
00:30:37,760 --> 00:30:45,760
We have in our town today two mothers,
each of whom has given two sons already.
422
00:30:45,840 --> 00:30:50,680
And, as I said before, we'll give
our sons, we'll give our lives,
423
00:30:50,760 --> 00:30:52,880
but, by the help and grace of God,
424
00:30:52,960 --> 00:30:57,960
we will not give up our free America
or our democratic way of life.
425
00:30:58,720 --> 00:31:01,280
♪ Strike up the band
426
00:31:03,120 --> 00:31:05,040
♪ Yankee-doo doodle-doo doodle-doo
427
00:31:05,120 --> 00:31:07,440
♪ We'll come through,
doodle-doo doodle-doo
428
00:31:07,520 --> 00:31:09,600
♪ For the red, white and blue,
doodle-doo
429
00:31:09,680 --> 00:31:12,440
♪ Lend a hand
430
00:31:12,520 --> 00:31:14,320
♪ With the flag unfurled
431
00:31:14,400 --> 00:31:16,760
♪ We can lick the world
432
00:31:16,840 --> 00:31:24,840
♪ Hey, leader, strike up the band
433
00:31:28,080 --> 00:31:30,840
(narrator)
On the night of Pearl Harbour,
434
00:31:30,920 --> 00:31:33,720
one man had been happy—
Winston Churchill.
435
00:31:33,800 --> 00:31:36,880
For now he knew Britain was saved.
436
00:31:36,960 --> 00:31:39,360
A few days later
he journeyed to Washington
437
00:31:39,440 --> 00:31:41,760
to make sure the war
was going to be fought
438
00:31:41,840 --> 00:31:45,760
on the British plan of Europe first
and the Pacific second,
439
00:31:45,840 --> 00:31:49,240
and to cement
the new Anglo-American alliance.
440
00:31:49,320 --> 00:31:52,920
What kind of a people
do they think we are?
441
00:31:53,000 --> 00:31:55,840
Is it possible they do not realise
442
00:31:55,920 --> 00:32:00,320
that we shall never cease
to persevere against them
443
00:32:00,400 --> 00:32:02,960
until they have been taught a lesson
444
00:32:03,040 --> 00:32:06,160
which they and the world
will never forget.
445
00:32:14,200 --> 00:32:18,600
(narrator) Time, Churchill knew,
was on the Allies' side.
446
00:32:18,680 --> 00:32:24,200
With America's industrial might
behind them, they could not lose.
447
00:32:25,400 --> 00:32:26,520
(shouts order)
448
00:32:33,640 --> 00:32:37,400
1942 began badly
for the Americans in the Pacific.
449
00:32:37,480 --> 00:32:43,200
Manila, capital of the Philippines,
fell to the Japanese on January 1.
450
00:32:45,640 --> 00:32:48,200
The Japanese
pushed the American forces
451
00:32:48,280 --> 00:32:51,000
back into the narrow peninsular
of Bataan.
452
00:32:57,920 --> 00:32:59,920
The American plan was to hold out there
453
00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:03,400
for six months or so,
until reinforcements came.
454
00:33:03,480 --> 00:33:06,160
But the reinforcements never did come,
455
00:33:06,240 --> 00:33:10,800
and nor had Bataan
been really prepared for a siege.
456
00:33:33,200 --> 00:33:36,920
The American troops besieged at Bataan
had no air support,
457
00:33:37,000 --> 00:33:41,120
were short of medical supplies
and their morale was poor.
458
00:33:41,200 --> 00:33:44,440
Even their commander-in-chief,
General MacArthur,
459
00:33:44,520 --> 00:33:47,200
had left them for safer shores.
460
00:33:48,880 --> 00:33:53,040
Their bitter ballad:
“We are the battling bastards of Bataan
461
00:33:53,120 --> 00:33:55,960
No mama, no papa, no Uncle Sam
462
00:33:56,040 --> 00:33:59,200
No aunts, no uncles,
no cousins, no nieces,
463
00:33:59,280 --> 00:34:02,200
No pills, no planes or artillery pieces
464
00:34:02,280 --> 00:34:05,200
And nobody gives a goddamn.”
465
00:34:07,320 --> 00:34:10,000
Cock-a-hoop with the ease
of their victory so far,
466
00:34:10,080 --> 00:34:16,280
the Japanese called on the Americans
beleaguered in Bataan to surrender.
467
00:34:16,360 --> 00:34:22,640
The voice of the Philippines calling
the attention of everyone everywhere.
468
00:34:23,400 --> 00:34:30,480
Everyone everywhere, Filipinos
and Americans all over the country…
469
00:34:32,880 --> 00:34:35,520
(narrator) They tried leaflets too…
470
00:34:38,120 --> 00:34:44,000
aimed mostly at the Filipino soldiers
among the American forces.
471
00:34:45,000 --> 00:34:48,920
The Japanese closed in for the kill.
472
00:35:26,280 --> 00:35:27,760
In early May, 1942,
473
00:35:27,840 --> 00:35:31,560
the American commander in the
Philippines, General Wainwright,
474
00:35:31,640 --> 00:35:36,080
bowed to the inevitable and surrendered
the remainder of his forces.
475
00:35:36,160 --> 00:35:40,960
(interpreter) I've decided to accept,
in the name of humanity,
476
00:35:41,040 --> 00:35:48,600
the formal surrender of all American
and Philippine army troops
477
00:35:48,680 --> 00:35:50,720
in the Philippine Islands.
478
00:35:50,800 --> 00:35:58,800
You will—repeat, will—surrender all
troops to the proper Japanese officer.
479
00:35:59,520 --> 00:36:02,520
(narrator)
80,000 Americans surrendered,
480
00:36:02,600 --> 00:36:07,800
the largest mass capitulation
in American military history.
481
00:36:07,880 --> 00:36:10,840
The Japanese made the Americans
march in the blazing sun
482
00:36:10,920 --> 00:36:14,520
to prison camps
100 or so miles from Bataan.
483
00:36:14,600 --> 00:36:19,600
Deprived of water and medicine,
starved and brutally beaten,
484
00:36:19,680 --> 00:36:23,080
some 10,000 soldiers
died along the way—
485
00:36:23,160 --> 00:36:27,040
more than had been killed
in the actual fighting for Bataan.
486
00:36:36,720 --> 00:36:41,200
By that spring of 1942, the Japanese
conquests were at their peak.
487
00:36:41,280 --> 00:36:45,360
Surely the British and Americans would
now want to make peace, argued Tokyo—
488
00:36:45,440 --> 00:36:49,520
a peace that would allow the Japanese
to retain their conquests.
489
00:36:49,600 --> 00:36:54,200
But already bold steps were being taken
to strike back at the Japanese
490
00:36:54,280 --> 00:36:57,960
here in the heart of their empire,
Tokyo.
491
00:36:58,040 --> 00:37:01,400
I was on this cruiser
called the Northampton
492
00:37:01,480 --> 00:37:06,600
and we were several days out at sea
when we saw the Hornet coming up.
493
00:37:06,680 --> 00:37:09,920
And the Hornet
had very unusual planes on deck—
494
00:37:10,000 --> 00:37:12,040
you could see them from a long way.
495
00:37:12,120 --> 00:37:16,280
They were large
land-based planes—B-25s.
496
00:37:17,640 --> 00:37:25,040
(man) We had only one real worry—
that would have been a dead calm.
497
00:37:25,120 --> 00:37:26,560
Under those conditions,
498
00:37:26,640 --> 00:37:30,120
taking off the carrier deck
with the heavy loads that we had
499
00:37:30,200 --> 00:37:32,360
would have been at best precarious.
500
00:37:32,440 --> 00:37:34,880
The worst thing we thought might happen
501
00:37:34,960 --> 00:37:38,200
would be a completely alerted Japan
waiting for us.
502
00:37:38,280 --> 00:37:43,600
What did happen was that
the morning just before take-off
503
00:37:43,680 --> 00:37:46,480
we encountered
two Japanese fishing boats.
504
00:37:46,560 --> 00:37:51,680
They spotted our task force,
sent a message to the mainland,
505
00:37:51,760 --> 00:37:54,920
but, unfortunately for the Japanese,
506
00:37:55,000 --> 00:37:58,960
were sunk
before they could repeat the message.
507
00:38:02,400 --> 00:38:05,960
So we achieved almost complete surprise.
508
00:38:26,960 --> 00:38:31,840
The actual amount of damage done
was minimal.
509
00:38:31,920 --> 00:38:36,520
We were 16 aeroplanes,
each with one ton of bombs.
510
00:38:36,600 --> 00:38:41,640
In the later stages of World War II,
the 20th Air Force under LeMay
511
00:38:41,720 --> 00:38:46,120
was sending out 500 aeroplanes,
each with 10 tons of bombs.
512
00:38:46,200 --> 00:38:50,400
So we dropped 16
against a later raid of 5,000,
513
00:38:50,480 --> 00:38:53,520
so the damage was not at all great.
514
00:38:53,600 --> 00:38:56,280
However, it did have some advantages.
515
00:38:56,360 --> 00:39:00,200
One, we had had
nothing but bad news at home,
516
00:39:00,280 --> 00:39:02,760
so it was the first good news
our folks got
517
00:39:02,840 --> 00:39:06,160
and it was appreciated as good news.
518
00:39:06,240 --> 00:39:09,600
It caused the Japanese
to question their warlords,
519
00:39:09,680 --> 00:39:13,320
who had informed them
that Japan would never be attacked.
520
00:39:16,120 --> 00:39:20,960
(narrator) The Doolittle raid stung
Japan's leaders and made them careless.
521
00:39:21,520 --> 00:39:22,880
Ever since Pearl Harbour,
522
00:39:22,960 --> 00:39:26,520
Japan's navy had sought a decisive
battle with America's navy,
523
00:39:26,600 --> 00:39:32,160
a battle that would decide
once and for all mastery of the Pacific.
524
00:39:39,200 --> 00:39:42,320
In early June, 1942,
the Japanese carriers
525
00:39:42,400 --> 00:39:45,480
rendezvous'd close to Midway Island,
526
00:39:45,560 --> 00:39:49,120
some 1300 miles northwest of Hawaii.
527
00:40:03,480 --> 00:40:05,480
(speaking Japanese)
528
00:40:06,360 --> 00:40:09,240
(translator)
We had ceased to be as wary as before.
529
00:40:09,320 --> 00:40:13,040
The Americans knew in advance
that we would attack Midway.
530
00:40:13,120 --> 00:40:16,160
They were waiting for us
and we walked into their trap.
531
00:41:46,640 --> 00:41:48,840
(narrator)
But while the Japanese navy's
532
00:41:48,920 --> 00:41:51,120
attention was focused on Midway Island,
533
00:41:51,200 --> 00:41:53,080
the American navy were preparing
534
00:41:53,160 --> 00:41:55,480
to strike back
at the Japanese carrier fleet.
535
00:41:55,560 --> 00:41:58,800
(man) We had a wonderful advantage—
we were breaking their code
536
00:41:58,880 --> 00:42:00,280
and they didn't know it.
537
00:42:00,360 --> 00:42:03,240
So we had some idea
what was going to happen there.
538
00:42:03,320 --> 00:42:05,120
We were on the scene
539
00:42:05,200 --> 00:42:10,240
with the carrier force in the right spot
to meet them.
540
00:43:12,520 --> 00:43:16,080
(narrator) Midway, one of the greatest
sea battles of all time,
541
00:43:16,160 --> 00:43:19,840
meant the US regained
naval control of the Pacific
542
00:43:19,920 --> 00:43:24,760
and was the end of Japan's hope
of any further conquests.
543
00:43:26,160 --> 00:43:27,680
The four Japanese carriers
544
00:43:27,760 --> 00:43:31,080
that had launched the raid
on Pearl Harbour six months before
545
00:43:31,160 --> 00:43:34,680
were destroyed by planes
from the very American carriers
546
00:43:34,760 --> 00:43:39,360
that had been at sea
and escaped destruction that day.
547
00:43:43,280 --> 00:43:47,440
The Battle of Midway doomed Japan.
548
00:43:47,520 --> 00:43:52,840
The Midway battle was, many people say,
the turning point of the Pacific war—
549
00:43:52,920 --> 00:43:58,000
that is, the turning point
from complete retreat on our part,
550
00:43:58,080 --> 00:44:03,120
or at least an attempt
to establish a stalemate, and offensive.
551
00:44:03,200 --> 00:44:08,680
(narrator) Turning point
not just at sea, but on land too.
552
00:44:10,720 --> 00:44:13,560
The island of Guadalcanal
in the Solomons,
553
00:44:13,640 --> 00:44:18,080
the southernmost limit
of the Japanese conquests.
554
00:44:22,640 --> 00:44:25,400
In August 1942, the Allies returned.
555
00:44:25,480 --> 00:44:29,160
For the Americans,
it was their first invasion of the war.
556
00:44:29,240 --> 00:44:33,920
(man) We had such a tiny fraction
of America's force and money—
557
00:44:34,000 --> 00:44:36,360
resources and manpower resources.
558
00:44:36,440 --> 00:44:39,000
90% went to Europe.
559
00:44:39,080 --> 00:44:43,440
We had such a tiny little thread
of existence down there.
560
00:44:43,520 --> 00:44:45,920
It was our first offensive
in the Pacific
561
00:44:46,000 --> 00:44:49,600
and we went in with only one division.
562
00:45:08,400 --> 00:45:12,840
The Japanese were tough fighters
and they never would give up.
563
00:45:12,920 --> 00:45:15,680
We had isolated a Japanese regiment
564
00:45:15,760 --> 00:45:19,000
in what was known as
the Gifu strongpoint,
565
00:45:19,080 --> 00:45:22,200
and they fought until
we actually had to annihilate them.
566
00:45:22,280 --> 00:45:25,920
We used loudspeakers
after we had surrounded them
567
00:45:26,000 --> 00:45:29,360
and tried to persuade them to surrender,
but they wouldn't.
568
00:45:29,440 --> 00:45:36,120
Japanese shouldn't have made
such a great effort in Guadalcanal.
569
00:45:36,200 --> 00:45:38,840
They could have saved their strength.
570
00:45:40,160 --> 00:45:42,200
(flies buzzing)
571
00:46:17,840 --> 00:46:22,000
(narrator) At long last the tide had
turned for the Allies in the Pacific.
572
00:46:22,080 --> 00:46:25,120
But it was still as yet only a sideshow.
573
00:46:25,200 --> 00:46:28,640
The main energies
were being reserved for Europe.
574
00:46:28,720 --> 00:46:30,480
It was really a little odd
575
00:46:30,560 --> 00:46:34,120
to the Americans in the general public
at that time
576
00:46:34,200 --> 00:46:38,000
that we were spending
so little effort in the Pacific.
577
00:46:38,080 --> 00:46:42,000
President Roosevelt made up his mind
that the defeat of Hitler
578
00:46:42,080 --> 00:46:47,000
was by far the most important
to achieve first—
579
00:46:47,080 --> 00:46:49,880
he was the most dangerous
of the enemies.
580
00:46:49,960 --> 00:46:51,600
And he was very skilful
581
00:46:51,680 --> 00:46:56,200
in keeping American public opinion
directed towards Europe,
582
00:46:56,280 --> 00:46:58,680
although we did have
a very major operation
583
00:46:58,760 --> 00:47:01,120
in Japan
and a very successful operation,
584
00:47:01,200 --> 00:47:03,640
after we recovered
from the tremendous blow
585
00:47:03,720 --> 00:47:06,920
of the loss of a substantial
part of our navy at Pearl Harbour.
586
00:47:07,000 --> 00:47:13,880
I think that generally public opinion
had the feeling, as we say in baseball,
587
00:47:13,960 --> 00:47:16,560
the big league was in Europe
588
00:47:16,640 --> 00:47:21,200
and in the United Kingdom—
I include that in Western Europe.
589
00:47:21,280 --> 00:47:24,000
The decision was made early
590
00:47:24,080 --> 00:47:29,080
that Europe came first—
and it was a wise decision—
591
00:47:29,160 --> 00:47:30,560
in spite of the fact
592
00:47:30,640 --> 00:47:35,240
we got the devil knocked out of us
in the Pacific for a long time.
593
00:47:35,320 --> 00:47:39,920
That was the right decision
and I think everybody recognised it.
594
00:47:40,000 --> 00:47:43,080
Now, of course, the navy protested
595
00:47:43,160 --> 00:47:47,360
at being left
way underpowered in the Pacific.
596
00:47:47,440 --> 00:47:54,320
And it did put us up to
very heavy casualties and all of that.
597
00:47:54,400 --> 00:47:59,680
But I think the country in general
agreed with the decision
598
00:47:59,760 --> 00:48:03,320
that the real threat was in Europe.
599
00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:06,280
We could take care of the Japs
in our own good time,
600
00:48:06,360 --> 00:48:12,160
but the real thing that had to be met
was on the Continent.
601
00:48:22,760 --> 00:48:26,160
♪ This is the army, Mr Jones
602
00:48:26,240 --> 00:48:30,360
♪ No private rooms or telephones
603
00:48:30,440 --> 00:48:33,680
♪ You had your breakfast in bed before
604
00:48:33,760 --> 00:48:37,680
♪ But you won't have it there any more
605
00:48:37,760 --> 00:48:39,520
Here we teach you how to kill:
606
00:48:39,600 --> 00:48:42,760
get the opponent on the ground
as quick as possible
607
00:48:42,840 --> 00:48:45,400
and snuff out his life
by kicking with both feet,
608
00:48:45,480 --> 00:48:47,120
one foot, the flat of the hand,
609
00:48:47,200 --> 00:48:50,160
a rabbit punch,
gouging the eyes out, ripping the mouth.
610
00:48:50,240 --> 00:48:52,520
The gentle art of killing a man
611
00:48:52,600 --> 00:48:56,800
is to get him on the ground
and kick in this manner. See?
612
00:49:01,400 --> 00:49:04,000
Come on, all of you do that.
Come on.
613
00:49:05,080 --> 00:49:08,600
♪ Do what the buglers command
614
00:49:08,680 --> 00:49:12,640
♪ They're in the army and not in a band
615
00:49:12,720 --> 00:49:16,720
♪ This is the army, Mr Brown
616
00:49:16,800 --> 00:49:20,120
♪ You and your baby went to town
617
00:49:20,200 --> 00:49:23,480
♪ She had you worried,
but this is war
618
00:49:23,560 --> 00:49:27,240
♪ And she won't worry you any more
619
00:49:27,320 --> 00:49:31,240
♪ Mr Jones, Mr Green
620
00:49:31,320 --> 00:49:33,160
♪ Mr Brown…
621
00:49:33,240 --> 00:49:39,280
Mr Churchill
did have a real antipathy, I think,
622
00:49:39,360 --> 00:49:46,320
toward getting ashore what he would call
prematurely onto the European continent.
623
00:49:46,400 --> 00:49:48,520
He had very vivid memories
624
00:49:48,600 --> 00:49:53,080
of the sacrifice
of a British generation in World War I.
625
00:49:53,160 --> 00:49:57,000
Passchendaele and the Somme—
they were always nightmares to him.
626
00:49:57,080 --> 00:49:59,000
After all this passion
627
00:49:59,080 --> 00:50:01,960
that had been aroused
as a result of Pearl Harbour
628
00:50:02,040 --> 00:50:05,640
and our being in the war, marching
and counter-marching and training,
629
00:50:05,720 --> 00:50:07,760
we just had to get ashore someplace.
630
00:50:07,840 --> 00:50:09,480
In view of the British attitude,
631
00:50:09,560 --> 00:50:13,920
which felt we weren't prepared
to go into the main theatre,
632
00:50:14,000 --> 00:50:17,280
we sniffed around for another spot
to express our strength
633
00:50:17,360 --> 00:50:19,120
and it turned out it was Africa.
634
00:50:19,200 --> 00:50:23,560
♪ Over there
635
00:50:23,640 --> 00:50:25,720
♪ Send the word, send the word
636
00:50:25,800 --> 00:50:27,840
♪ Over there
637
00:50:27,920 --> 00:50:30,320
♪ That the Yanks are coming
638
00:50:30,400 --> 00:50:32,680
♪ The Yanks are coming
639
00:50:32,760 --> 00:50:36,000
♪ The drums rum-tumming everywhere
640
00:50:36,560 --> 00:50:38,560
♪ So prepare
641
00:50:38,640 --> 00:50:40,920
♪ Say a prayer
642
00:50:41,000 --> 00:50:42,960
♪ Send the word, send the word
643
00:50:43,040 --> 00:50:45,080
♪ To beware
644
00:50:45,160 --> 00:50:47,160
♪ We'll be over
645
00:50:47,240 --> 00:50:49,440
♪ We're coming over
646
00:50:49,520 --> 00:50:54,360
♪ And we won't come back
till it's over over there
647
00:50:58,240 --> 00:51:02,640
♪ And we won't come back
till it's over over there
648
00:51:05,000 --> 00:51:07,640
(narrator) November, 1942.
649
00:51:07,720 --> 00:51:10,440
600 ships, loaded with men and material,
650
00:51:10,520 --> 00:51:14,120
set sail for North Africa—
Operation Torch.
651
00:51:14,200 --> 00:51:19,040
Said Roosevelt, when he heard the news,
“At last we're on our way.”
54119
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