Introduction
On May 10, 1982, Henry A. Kissinger mounted
the podium at Chatham House, the London home of the Royal Institute for International
Affairs, to deliver the keynote address for the bicentenary celebration of the
Office of the British Foreign Secretary. Kissinger boasted of his loyalty to the
British Foreign Office on all crucial matters of postwar policy matters in dispute
between the United States and Britain. The crux of his disagreement with his own
nominal country, the United States, he told his audience, was the basic dispute
in policy and philosophy between "Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, reflecting
our different histories." Roosevelt, Kissinger stated, had condemned Churchill
as being "needlessly obsessed with power politics, too rigidly anti-Soviet, too
colonialist in his attitude to what is now called the Third World, and too little
interested in building the fundamentally new international order towards which
American idealism had always tended."
It is Churchill who was right, and
Roosevelt, who was wrong, in these matters, said Kissinger.
While the majority
of Kissinger's elite audience was keenly aware of the bitter dispute between Roosevelt
and Churchill, a different history has been made available to the average American:
a mass of lies and half-truths about a so-called "special relationship" between
Britain and the United States, based on common ideals, supposedly supported by
both Churchill and Roosevelt, and intended to last into the next millennium. This
rewriting of history began almost immediately with FDR's untimely death in April
1945, and has continued to this day.
Thus, what was perhaps the defining
battle that shaped the course of current history remains unknown to most Americans.
It is important that this story now truthfully be told, especially as a young
American President has taken the steps to walk away from Britain and the "special
relationship."
The historical evidence shows that Roosevelt entered into
the military alliance with Britain with only one purpose in mind: the defeat of
an enemy. The historical evidence also shows that Franklin Roosevelt was committed
to dismantling the British Empire--and all other empires--and to replacing them
with sovereign nation-states, modelled on the American constitutional republic,
in which each citizen would be given, through access to modern scientific education
and Western culture, the opportunity to create a better life for himself and his
posterity.
It is this view of man, in the tradition of Western Judeo-Christian
civilization, that places a value in each sovereign human individual, that the
oligarch Churchill bitterly opposed, and that President Franklin D. Roosevelt
espoused.
In 1946, as the history of the period was already being rewritten,
FDR's son, Elliot, published a short book, titled As He Saw It. With pungency
and force, using first-hand acccounts, Elliot told the truth about his father's
bitter fights with Churchill, leading the historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. to
state in a contemporary review that the book's central thesis was that Roosevelt
saw Great Britain and its imperial system as a far greater adversary to the United
States than Russia.
Some historians have charged the younger Roosevelt with
inaccuracies in reporting. However, Elliot's reports have been subsequently supported
by reams of declassified documents, as well as first-hand accounts from the day.
What emerges is the story of a pitched battle between two powerful actors on the
stage of history--often fought in the open--over two diametrically opposed visions
for the postwar world.
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The Protagonists
There is little in the early career or papers of
Franklin Roosevelt to suggest that he would emerge as a leading spokesman against
British imperial interests. He was a patrician, a cousin of the raving anglophile
agent Teddy Roosevelt, a member of a decadently pro-British, American Eastern
Establishment. However, by the late 1920s, Roosevelt was, according to his close
friend, Ernest Lindley, "thoroughly anti-imperialist in thought and emotions."
During the period of his convalescence from an attack of polio (1923-27), during
his early 40s, Roosevelt reevaluated his assumptions governing American foreign
policy. Having once accepted the use of American military power as a vehicle to
secure debt of bankers, Roosevelt, studying Lincoln and the Founding Fathers intensely,
began to see such actions as immoral and against the principles on which the nation
was founded. In addition, Roosevelt, in published papers, most notably a 1928
article in the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) journal Foreign Affairs, stated
that moral principles must govern foreign policy, and that imperialist looting
was contrary to documents that he regarded as sacred--the Declaration of Independence
and the Constitution.
Such views placed him within a faction of American
patriots, whose interests were opposed to British imperialism and Britain's minions
in the American financial and political establishment, centered around the Wall
Street investment bankers, such as the Morgans. These patriotic interests transcended
political parties, and included many Republicans as well as Democrats. Within
the military, they included such figures as Douglas MacArthur. This patriotic
faction was responsible for the drafting in the 1920s of War Plan Red, a contingency
planning document for a war with Britain, and they had fought to maintain an independent
U.S. naval power. Roosevelt, a former assistant navy secretary, was aware of these
plans and disputes with Britain.
Roosevelt's new moral, foreign policy was
embodied in his first inaugural and subsequent speeches as the "Good Neighbor"
policy, first directed toward Ibero-America, but with a more general application
to rest of the world. It was further elaborated in his initiation of steps to
secure independence for the Philippines, a nation that the United States had ostensibly
"liberated" from the Spanish, only to hold in thrall and poverty as a colony.
In drafting the act that was to guarantee the Philippines' independence by 1946,
Roosevelt stated: "Our nation covets no territory; it desires to hold no people
against their will over whom it has gained sovereignty through war or by any other
means."
The last statement was a direct attack on the concept of empire,
including the British Empire. Its import was not lost on London. An official message
asked whether the statement was meant to imply anything about the British Empire.
The State Department, a bastion of British subversion within the American government,
replied that it didn't; Roosevelt pointedly refused to respond to the British
request to clarify his statement.
Britain's powers-that-be considered Roosevelt's
implied attack on the empire unacceptable and dangerous meddling. While there
may have been some important disagreements on the form and mechanisms of colonial
rule between the "Colonel Blimps" of the Colonial Office and more "enlightened
imperialists," including those associated with the lords of the Labour Party,
there was unanimity on the need to maintain the empire in one form or another,
as the bedrock of the Venetian imperial system, whose head was the reigning ruler
of the House of Windsor.
Already emerging as a spokesman for the race patriots
and imperialists was the Conservative, Winston Churchill, the archetypical "Colonel
Blimp." Churchill, who had an American mother, nevertheless hated everything American,
especially its republican government and its people's decidedly anti-imperial
sense of charity. American civilization is "doomed," he once wrote, by such views,
to which fortunately, the less "sappy" of the British elites showed no inclination.
Where Roosevelt believed in a Christian God, Churchill merely mouthed such beliefs,
but spoke in terms of Wagnerian "gods," who punished the good and wicked alike,
at whim. In published locations, Churchill criticized the social programs of Roosevelt's
New Deal, preferring to promote the survival of the fittest, rather than support
by government for the less fortunate.
Here, then is a basic dividing line
between the protagonists in our battle for the future of Western civilization.
Roosevelt's New Deal program, with all its flaws in implementation, embodied the
concept that lawful government must have a commitment to the general welfare of
its citizens, especially the least fortunate. As Roosevelt stated it in 1936,
it is a commitment to the Christian concept of "caritas" or charity, "that does
not merely share the wealth of the giver, but in true sympathy and wisdom helps
men to help themselves.
"We seek not merely to make Government a mechanical
implement, but to give it a vibrant personal character that is very much the embodiment
of human charity."
Roosevelt, Churchill was to say later, was a man of "dangerous
moral sentiments."
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A Hardening of Views
Unlike Churchill, who openly supported Hitler
and especially Mussolini as a matter of policy, until the late 1930s, Roosevelt,
although interested in some of the economic programs of the fascists, especially
their infrastructure building plans, had little use for the two dictators, and
gradually came to see them as a threat to the future existence of Western civilization.
But
Roosevelt found himself constrained from playing a more important role in international
politics by a number of factors. For one thing, the State Department was effectively
run from the British Foreign Office, making accurate policy assessments impossible,
and even implementation of presidential policy problematic. The situation was
compounded by a lack of competent foreign intelligence estimates, beyond simple
military questions, caused by an unreliable and undermanned intelligence service.
(Roosevelt, over the course of his presidency, attempted to overcome this through
the creation of private intelligence and diplomatic channels.) Further, the American
military, weakened by treaty arrangements in the naval area in the 1920s and early
1930s, and further emaciated by the effects of the Great Depression, was incapable
of projecting American power in Europe and/or most other parts of the world. This
state of affairs was not to be corrected until long after the start of World War
II in 1939, and the U.S. mobilization to win this war.
Moreover, the American
people were not ready to stand behind a President who wanted the nation to assume
global leadership. Years of misleadership and disinformation, circulated by British
operatives and their "anti-British" dupes, had led America down the blind alley
of "isolationism," away from its historic mission of world leadership. Roosevelt
saw it as his personal responsibility to reverse this miseducation, and did so
through a series of speeches and messages on foreign policy from 1937-41.
In
October 1938, as the British led the world down the path towards war at Munich,
Roosevelt proposed privately to the British that a conference be held to repudiate
the Versailles Treaty and its onerous conditions, and declare the world committed
to equal access for all nations to raw materials. The Chamberlain government,
sensing that such a conference might turn into an attack on the imperial arrangements
that gave the British the exclusive looting rights in their colonies, told Roosevelt
to back off. Under pressure from his own State Department to support the British,
Roosevelt withdrew the idea.
The outbreak of war in Europe in September
1939 demonstrated the utter bankruptcy of British and French policy. From his
letters and correspondence of the period, it appears that the motion toward war
had caused Roosevelt to again reevaluate the assumptions of the Versailles system.
While it is not clear that he understood the responsibility of the British for
creating Hitler and the Nazi state, he did see that the Versailles system--the
perpetuation of the British imperial system in another form--was at its root.
He had long since given up his former support for the League of Nations, because,
as he wrote to a friend in 1936, it was little more than a debating society for
the British and their interests; the League, with its mandate system, had, in
fact, reinforced the claims of the colonial powers for sovereignty over their
empires, while redistributing the colonial "booty" from the losing powers of World
War I to the victors.
"Imperialism equals war," Roosevelt later told his
son Elliot. While not the only factor in creating the new world war, the desire
of the imperial powers, led by British, to maintain the colonial system had been
a major factor leading to the war. Conversely, if, after this war, a just and
lasting peace were to be created, the entire edifice of the imperial system had
to be dismantled. America would be Britain (and France's) ally in the coming war,
but must not agree to allow the British to dictate the shape of the peace, whenever
that peace came.
He described these views to Elliot in 1943:
"I've
tried to make it clear ... that while we're [Britain's] allies and in it to victory
by their side, they must never get the idea that we're in it just to help them
hang on to their archaic, medieval empire ideas ... I hope they realize they're
not senior partner; that we are not going to sit by and watch their system stultify
the growth of every country in Asia and half the countries in Europe to boot."
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The Four Freedoms
With the fall of France in May 1940, Churchill
roared into 10 Downing Street as the new prime minister. Almost immediately, he
began to barrage Washington with requests for American aid and the rapid entry
of the United States into the war. Roosevelt repeatedly and emphatically rejected
the increasingly more shrill requests from Churchill for a declaration of war
against the Hitler.
Roosevelt, with calculation, declared America in November
1940 to be the "arsenal of democracy," announcing plans for a major conversion
of industrial capacity for military production. The need to supply Britain, and
later, in 1941, even before the German invasion, the Soviet Union, with weapons
was a cover for the President's plans to make America the foremost military power
on the face of the earth.
To cover his back, so to speak, and with the recognition
that American entry into the war was inevitable, Roosevelt crafted a government
of national unity, opening his cabinet prior to the 1940 election (in which he
was running for an unprecedented third term) to members of establishment factions
whom he knew to oppose basic components of his domestic and foreign policy; however,
the consensus among these scoundrels--who included the new Secretary of War, Henry
Stimson, the founder of the anglophile Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)--was
that Britain had to be saved, and that Germany had to be defeated. They obviously
did not agree, nor did his State Department, with his developing anti-colonial
strategy, nor his views on building a lasting alliance with Soviet Russia and
Stalin. Roosevelt, not naive in political intrigues, knew that Stimson, Dean Acheson
(whom he had once fired because of support for British economic policy), Frank
Knox, the Navy Secretary, and the others could not be trusted; but, as he remarked
to an associate, he would might as well have them in place where he could keep
a good eye on them, as they were going to attempt to subvert his policies anyway.
In
November 1940, Roosevelt demanded an accounting from Churchill of British financial
resources. What came back, in a classified communication, were the details of
the London's effective bankruptcy: London could not pay for any aid. Roosevelt's
advisers created the Lend-Lease program to meet this contingency, but Roosevelt
had all the evidence he needed that Britain was a bankrupt power, dependent upon
the United States for survival--and from this position, unable to dictate the
terms of the future peace. The future belonged to the United States. On Jan. 6,
1941, Roosevelt, the President of a nation that was not yet formally at war, presented
in his State of the Union address, the principles around which the war was to
be fought. The "Four Freedoms" speech defined for a whole generation the aspirations
that would guide Roosevelt's vision of the postwar world.
After describing
the necessary dependency of Britain upon the U.S.A., FDR stated:
"As men
do not live by bread alone, they do not fight by armaments alone. Those who man
our defenses, and those behind them who build our defenses, must have the stamina
and the courage which come from the unshakable belief in the manner of life which
they are defending. The mighty action that we are calling for cannot be based
on disregard of all things worth fighting for...
"For there is nothing mysterious
about the foundations of a healthy and strong democracy. The basic things expected
by our people of their political and economic systems are simple. They are:
"Equality
of opportunity for youth and for others.
"Jobs for all those who can work.
"Security
for all those who need it.
"The ending of special privileges for the few.
"The
preservation of civil liberties for all.
"The enjoyment of the fruits of
scientific progress in a wider and constantly rising standard of living.
"These
are simple, basic things that must never be lost in the sight of the turmoil and
unbelievable complexity of our modern world. The inner and abiding strength of
our economic and political systems is dependent upon the degree to which they
fulfill these expectations....
Having stated these principles from a standpoint
accessible to the average American citizen, FDR universalized them so as to apply
to the rest of the world, not from the standpoint of an existing world, but as
principles of change, to move the world from its current wretched state to a new
and better postwar war.
"In future days, which we seek to secure, we look
forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms. "The first is the
freedom of speech and expression--everywhere in the world.
"The second is
the freedom of every person to worship God in his own way--everywhere in the world.
"The
third is the freedom from want--which, translated into world terms, means economic
understandings which will secure to every nation a healthy peacetime life for
its inhabitants--everywhere in the world.
"The fourth is freedom from fear--which,
translated into world terms, means a worldwide reduction of armaments to such
a point and in such a thorough fashion that no nation will be in a position to
commit an act of physical aggression against any neighbor--anywhere in the world.
"That
is no vision of a distant millennium. It is a definite basis for a kind of world
attainable in our time and generation. That kind of world is the very antithesis
of the so-called new order of tyranny which dictators seek to create with the
crash of a bomb.
"To that new order, we oppose the greater conception--the
moral order. A good society is able to face schemes of world domination and foreign
revolutions alike without fear.
"Since the beginning of American history,
we have been engaged in change--in a perpetual peaceful revolution--a revolution
which goes on steadily, quietly, adjusting itself to changing conditions--without
the concentration camp or the quicklime in the ditch. The world order which we
seek is the cooperation of free countries, working together in a friendly, civilized
society.
"This nation has placed its destiny in the hands and heads and
hearts of millions of free men and women; and its faith in freedom under the guidance
of God. Freedom means the supremacy of human rights everywhere. Our support goes
to those who struggle to gain those rights or to keep them. Our strength is our
unity of purpose.
"To that high concept there can be no end save victory."
Roosevelt
deliberately enunciated the word "everywhere," as he repeated it in cadence with
each of the Four Freedoms, and in relation to the struggle for human rights and
freedom. According to his aide, Sam Rosenman, Roosevelt had dictated the draft
of this section of the speech himself. As he dictated, his trusted advisor Harry
Hopkins questioned the use of the word "everywhere," saying that the American
people didn't care about people in Africa or elsewhere. "They had better start
caring, Harry," replied the President.
Later that year, Norman Rockwell's
illustrations of the "Four Freedoms" were hanging in homes, barber shops and post
offices throughout the land.
In March 1941, Roosevelt reiterated those principles,
speaking of an end to the subjugation of men by other men. Speaking of the end
of the war, FDR stated, "then our country must continue to play a great part in
the period of world reconstruction, for the good of humanity.
"...There
never has been, there isn't now, and there never will be, any race of people fit
to serve as masters over their fellow men...
"We believe that any nationality,
no matter how small, has the inherent right to its own nationhood."
Roosevelt's
remarks, each more provocative that the previous, did not go unnoticed by Churchill.
Cables flew across the Atlantic to British operatives to determine how much support
Roosevelt might have for his anti-colonial positions among the American people.
Churchill did not like what he was told. As Sir Norman Angell reports, Roosevelt
was speaking for a majority opinion within the population: "How could a man like
Franklin Roosevelt, of all people, come to hold the [anti-British, anti-colonial]
views he did? His view was that of so many of his countrymen who differentiate
sharply between the British people and the British government. The British people
are regarded generally as decent, honest, law-abiding, freedom loving. But their
government is usually represented as a class or caste rule, maintaining often
against the will the people, a world tyranny compounded of imperialism, colonialism
and power politics which violates all the political morals, and, in particular,
denies the elementary human rights of all peoples to be independent like the United
States."
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The Atlantic Charter
Roosevelt now sought to have the British "sign
on" to the principles of the Four Freedoms. He asked for a summit conference with
Churchill in early 1941, banking on the latter's desperation and need for American
assistance to gain agreement. After delaying the summit for several months, Churchill
finally agreed to hold it off the coast of Argentia, Newfoundland on Aug. 13-14,
1941.
While the normal histories of the "Atlantic Charter" conference, speak
of a "deepening" relationship between Churchill and Roosevelt, first hand accounts,
including Elliot Roosevelt's, give a different story. The anti-British sentiment
within parts of the American delegation permeated the discussions among the working
bodies. Elliot recounts one top American military aide telling him that the public
"British love fest" was phony:
"Love us? All they want is our birthright!"
"The British Empire is at stake here,"
FDR told Elliot as meetings got underway.
"We've
got to make it clear to the British from the very outset that we don't intend
to be simply a good-time Charlie who can be used to help the British Empire out
of a tight spot, and then be forgotten forever. "...I think I speak as America's
President when I say that America won't help England in this war simply so that
she will be able to continue to ride roughshod over colonial peoples."
There
were bitter arguments over Roosevelt's plan to provide the Russians with American
material support, with Churchill declaring that such aid was wasted, and that
Russia--and the aid--would fall to the Germans. But the most intense clash came
over the question of the future of the British Empire. Roosevelt initiated the
discussion by cleverly turning the British "free trade" ideology against themselves,
demanding an end to the "Empire preferences."
"|'The British Empire trade
agreements," he [Churchill] began heavily, 'are--'|" "Father broke in. 'Yes. Those
Empire trade agreements are a case in point. It is because of them that the people
of India and Africa, of all the colonial Near East and Far East, are still as
backward as they are.' [Note: when the British encountered India, they did not
run into primitive tribal societies. Still, these tribal societies lived in harmony
with the earth and were not overpopulated; the British and other colonial powers
deprived these people forever of their own ability to self determine - it's too
far gone along the wrong path now for them. But when the British encountered India,
they encountered a far older civilization, far older scholarship and they just
ran rough over it like stupid, club-wielding brutes. It took Ghandi to finally
tell them to get the hell out.]
"Churchill's neck reddened and he crouched
forward. 'Mr. President, England does not propose for a moment to lose its favored
position among the British Dominions. The trade that has made England great shall
continue, and under these conditions prescribed by England's ministers.'
"|'You
see,' said Father slowly, 'it is along in here somewhere that there is likely
to be disagreement between you, Winston, and me.
"|'I am firmly of the belief
that if we are to arrive at a stable peace, it must involve the development of
backward countries. Backward peoples. How can this be done? It can't be done obviously
by eighteenth-century methods. Now--'
"|'Who's talking about eighteenth-century
methods?'
"|'Whichever of your ministers recommends a policy which takes
raw materials out of a colonial country, but which returns nothing to the people
of the that country in consideration. Twentieth-century methods involve bringing
industry to these colonies. Twentieth-century methods include increasing the standard
of living, by educating them, by bringing them sanitation--by making sure that
they get a return for the raw wealth of their community...'
"|'You mentioned
India,' he [Churchill] growled.
"|'Yes, I [Roosevelt] can't believe that
we can fight a war against fascist slavery, and at the same time not work to free
people all over the world from a backward colonial policy.'
"|'What about
the Philippines?'
"|'I am glad you mentioned them. They get their independence,
you know, in 1946. And they've gotten modern sanitation, modern education, their
rate of illiteracy has gone steadily down...'
"|'There can be no tampering
with the Empire's economic agreements.'
"|'They're artificial....'
"|'They
are the foundation of our greatness.'
"|'The peace,' said Father firmly,
'cannot include any continued despotism. The structure of the peace demands and
will get equality of peoples...'|"
Meanwhile, Roosevelt was determined to
have the British commit themselves now to the principles of the Four Freedoms,
knowing that they were incompatible with the continued existence of the Empire.
The text of the proposed Atlantic Charter was drafted by Roosevelt ally in the
State Department, Sumner Welles; it was fined-tuned in Argentia by Roosevelt.
The
Atlantic Charter, as signed by Churchill, states that the signatories "seek no
aggrandizement" and "no territorial changes that do not accord with the freely
expressed wishes of the peoples concerned." Its most-debated clause states:
"They
will respect the rights of all peoples to choose the form of government under
which they will live; they will to see the sovereign rights and self-government
restored to those who have been forcible deprived of them." Churchill insisted
that this only applied to occupied nations. Roosevelt, however, demanded the inclusion
of the term all, meaning that its applicability was universal--it included all
colonial peoples, including the British Empire. The British leadership now knew
first hand, if they had only feared or suspected as much before, that Roosevelt,
as a matter of absolute conviction, was at war with the British Empire. Elliot
recounts the following outburst from Churchill:
"Mr. President, I believe
you are trying to do away with the British Empire. Every idea you entertain about
the structure of the postwar world demonstrates it.... But in spite of that, you
constitute our only hope. You know it. We know it. You know that we know that
without America, the British Empire won't stand."
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The View from Downing Street (British government)
When war finally
came to the United States, on Dec. 7, 1941, America was already in a war mobilization
that had transformed the nation in less than three years into the world's foremost
military and industrial superpower. While publicly no such claims were made, documents
from the Roosevelt White House nerve center, its Map Room, were in December 1941
already discussing postwar plans in the Pacific and Europe.
As sat in his
map room, surrounded by his most trusted aides, and adjutants, Roosevelt looked
upon a world radically different from when he took office. The British Empire
was an economic, political, and military shambles, as were all the other empires--the
French, the Dutch, the Portuguese. They could not be out back together without
the agreement of the American superpower, and Roosevelt would not give that agreement.
Assuming
that full weight of American military power were brought to bear, the defeat of
the Japanese and Germans was inevitable; the question was how to do this most
efficiently, in the shortest period of time, with the least loss of life, with
no regard for British colonial interests. FDR was determined to prevent British
intriques to dismember or destroy the Soviet Union and to "disintegrate" China
as a nation-state. In Roosevelt's eyes, both China and Russia were needed as allies
to counterbalance the British after the war, to create a stable environment for
the dismantling of the imperial Versailles system.
On the other side of
the Atlantic, at 10 Downing Street, in Churchill's situation room, similar maps
and deployments were on display. Churchill's main goal, however, was to preserve
the British imperial system, in one form or another. In that regard, the United
States and Franklin Roosevelt represented a greater strategic threat than either
the Germans, whose Nazi government had been created by British bankers, or the
Japanese, whose royal family was manipulated by British assets; a potential American
postwar alliance with the Russians merely enhanced that threat.
Churchill's
strategy was to sacrifice part of the empire, including Australia, to the Japanese,
to trap the United States in a long Pacific War, that would bleed the nation and
last well beyond Roosevelt's lifetime. In addition, the second front in Europe
would be delayed to prolong the slaughter of the Russians. Thereby, the British
would gain time to regain control over their empire.
Roosevelt, with his
eyes fixed on the creation of just postwar order, did not go for the bait.
In
a mid-December 1941 conference with U.S. military leaders, he supported plans
to anchor U.S. military strategy in the Pacific around the defense of Australia,
a nation whom he regarded as crucial to postwar plans for the development of China
and the former colonial empires. In early 1942, FDR dispatched Patrick Hurley,
the secretary of war in the Hoover administration under whose direction the War
Plan Red (against the British) had been maintained and updated, to Australia,
to develop close relations with the prime minister, the Australian patriot John
Curtin. Hurley and Curtin worked out the plans to have Gen. Douglas MacArthur
lead the Allied counteroffensive in the Pacific.
Roosevelt also reportedly
gave orders that no American troops were to be deployed to fight for British colonial
possessions, no matter how much Churchill raved, except where such deployments
might have bearing on the defense of either Australia or China.
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The End of Imperialism
In December 1941 and February 1942, Churchill
flew to Washington for meetings with FDR. During the latter, Roosevelt, according
to firsthand accounts, launched into an appeal for the independence of India.
Churchill became red in the face, and charged the President with "meddling" into
empire affairs. Writing in 1950, Churchill let down his guard about his true feeling
about Roosevelt:
"The President's mind was back in the American War of Independence
and he thought of the Indian problem in terms of thirteen colonies fighting George
III at the end of the 18th century..."
With Churchill continuing to insist
that the Atlantic Charter had no relevance to the British Empire, Roosevelt asked
Undersecretary of State Welles to deliver an address that would make the universal
application of the charter's principles clear as a bell. The speech, delivered
on Memorial Day 1942 at Arlington National Cemetery, called the war "a people's
war" which "cannot be won until the fundamental rights of peoples of the earth
are secured." Speaking from a text approved by the President, Welles declared
that the system that divided thr world into "the haves" and "the have nots" must
be ended:
"If this war is in fact a war for the liberation of people, it
must assure the sovereign equality of peoples throughout the world, as well as
in the world of the Americas. Our victory must bring in its train the liberation
of all peoples. Discrimination between peoples because of race, creed, or color
must be abolished. The age of imperialism is ended. The right of a people to their
freedom must be recognized as the civilized world long since recognized the right
of an individual to his personal freedom. The principles of the Atlantic Charter
must be guaranteed to the world as a whole--in all oceans and all continents.
"And
so, in the fullness of God's time, when victory is won, the people of the United
States will once more be afforded the opportunity to play their part in the determination
of the kind of world in which they will live. With courage and with vision, they
can yet secure the future safety of their country and of its free institutions,
and help the nations of the earth back into the paths of peace..."
The British
ambassador, Lord Halifax, cabled London that Roosevelt was a "liar" and no friend
of the British; the American President, he said, was leading a crusade against
the British Empire and everything it stood for. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden,
who had come to Washington for talks, cabled Churchill that the Roosevelt position
"contemplates the dismantling of the British and Dutch empires...."
In July
1942, Roosevelt sanctioned a world tour by former 1940 GOP presidential candidate
Wendell Willkie, whom he had recruited into a tactical alliance against British
imperialism. Willkie carried personal instructions and messages from Roosevelt,
and his speeches spoke publicly of the anti-imperial content of American foreign
policy. Wherever Willkie went, he spoke of the "coming tide of freedom" which
would roll back imperialism. On Oct. 6, in Chungking China, he declared "We believe
that this war must mean an end to the empire of nations over other nations. No
foot of Chinese soil, for example, should be or can be ruled from now on except
by the people who live on it. And we must say so now, not after the war.
The
British were furious. Were Willkie's statements American policy, they demanded
to know. Roosevelt said nothing and told the State Department to acknowledge only
that the President had sanctioned the trip.
On his return to the U.S.A.,
Willkie delivered a nationwide radio broadcast report on his findings. He declared:
"In
Africa, in the Middle East, throughout the Arab world, as well as in China, and
the whole Far East, freedom means the orderly but scheduled abolition of the colonial
system. I can assure you that this is true. I can assure you that the rule of
people by other people is not freedom and not what we must fight to preserve....
"When
I say that in order to have peace this world must be free, I am only reporting
that a great process has started which no man--certainly not Hitler--can stop.
Men and women all over the world are on the march, physically, intellectually
and spiritually. After centuries of ignorant and dull compliance, hundreds of
millions of people in Eastern Europe and Asia have opened the books. Old fears
no longer frighten them. They are no longer willing to be eastern slaves for western
profits. They are beginning to know that men's welfare throughout the world is
interdependent. They are resolved, as we must be, that there is no more place
for imperialism within their own society than in the society of nations. The big
house on the hill surrounded by mud huts has lost its awesome charm."
The
next day, Roosevelt was asked at a press conference for his comment on this last
section of the Willkie speech. He stated that Willkie had merely restated a well-accepted
point, that "the Atlantic Charter applied to all humanity." Churchill could no
longer contain himself. On Nov. 10, 1942 he rose in the British Parliament to
acclaim the allied landings in North Africa. Instead, he launched into a defense
of British war aims, stating that they had not entered the war for profit or the
expansion of territory under the Union Jack. Then, he stated,
"Let me, however,
make this clear, in case that there should be any mistake about it in any quarter.
We mean to hold our own. I have not become the King's First Minister in order
to preside over the liquidation of the British Empire." Roosevelt made no direct
comments on Churchill's remarks. In a letter to an aide, he wrote:
"We are
going to have worse trouble with Britain [after the war] than we do with Nazi
Germany now."
As Churchill fumed, Roosevelt was refining his views on the
mechanisms for the transition from the Versailles colonial order to a new order
of independence, freedom, and development. He expressed concerns about how to
guard the peoples of the colonial world from further exploitation at the hands
of the British and other imperialists. But it were not possible to set the colonies
free without adequate preparation, or their peoples would be set up for exploitation
by other, indirect means.
His answer was a plan to create "trustees"-- a
group of nations--which would guarantee the development of nation-states in the
former colonies, while having the sovereignty of those areas reside with their
inhabitants. In some extreme cases, where it were impossible to create sovereign
nations for reasons of size or location, trustees could create internationally
guaranteed "free ports," to be developed for the benefit of all nations.
While
there were some within the British elites, including Lord Hailey, who believed
that Britain would have to give in to a new type of imperial mechanism developed
from the Commonwealth, proposals that would subject the empire to "trusteeship"
were regarded as tantamount to a declaration of war.
Behind Churchill's
back, Roosevelt discussed his anti-colonial strategy with Soviet Foreign Minister
Molotov when the latter visited Washington in late 1942. He told Molotov that
he felt that after the war it was going to be necessary to take colonial possessions
away from the mother countries, "for their own protection." Molotov indicated
that he was certain that Stalin would agree to these ideas, as he was favorable
to other proposals for the postwar world.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Confrontation at Casablanca
It was against this backdrop that Roosevelt
prepared for a confrontation on the colonial question with Churchill at the February
1943 Allied conference in Casablanca, Morocco.
It was apparently Roosevelt's
own idea that he should make a stop in Liberia on his trip to the meeting. Roosevelt
made brief public remarks highlighting the fact that Liberia had been founded
by American slaves and was a free nation, but he was outraged at what he saw:
substandard living conditions; he privately blamed the State Department for having
no policy on economic development for Liberia or for anywhere else in the "poor"
world, and saw this as undermining his foreign policy.
As embarrassed as
FDR was by what he saw in Liberia, he was, according to first hand accounts, visibly
shaken by what he viewed in a brief stop in British Gambia. On his arrival at
Casablanca, FDR told his son:
"The thing is, the colonial system means war.
Exploit the resources of a India, a Burma, a Java, take all the wealth out of
those countries, but never put anything back into them, things like education,
sanitation, decent standards of living, minimum health requirements--all you are
doing is storing up the kind of trouble that leads to war...I must tell Churchill
what I found out about his British Gambia today.... This morning at about eight-thirty,
we drove through Bathurst to the airfield. The natives were just getting to work.
In rags ... glum-looking.... They [his British hosts] told us that the natives
would look happier around noontime, when the sun would have burned off the dew
and the chill. I was told that the prevailing wages of these men was one and nine.
One shilling, nine pence. Less that fifty cents ... a day! Fifty cents a day!
Besides which they are given half a cup of rice.... Dirt. Disease. Very high mortality
rate. I asked life expectancy. You'd never guess what it is. Twenty six years!
These people are treated worse than livestock. Their cattle live longer!... Churchill
may have thought I wasn't serious last time [at Argentia]. He'll find out this
time."
We have some idea of what Roosevelt was saying from an account of
discussions, at which Churchill was present, with the Sultan of Morocco. Roosevelt,
speaking in French, stressed the need for Morocco to develop and control her own
resources. To do this, he said, required:
"the elevation of the living standards
of Moroccans; only by doing that could Morocco be free of imperial intrigues (Morocco
was at the time controlled by the French). The Sultan expressed a desire to obtain
modern education and health standards.
"Father pointed out," Elliot Roosevelt
wrote, "that to accomplish this, the Sultan should not permit outside interests
to obtain concessions which would drain off the country's resources."
Churchill
was described as growing increasingly furious at these comments, and repeatedly
tried to change the subject. Roosevelt persisted, telling the Sultan that the
postwar world would differ sharply from the prewar world, "especially as they
related to the colonial question." The Sultan asked FDR what he meant by "differ
sharply." Roosevelt explained that in the past, French and British financiers
combined into self-perpetuating syndicates for the purpose of dredging riches
out of the colonies; he then said that there were likely large oil deposits in
Morocco that needed development. The Sultan said, that while he would like to
pursue such possibilities and use the wealth to develop his nation, he was unable
to do so without going to the colonial powers, since his country lacked scientists,
engineers, and technicians needed to develop a petroleum industry. Roosevelt suggested
that the U.S.A. could establish a reciprocal aid program that would have as its
purpose the development of skilled engineers and scientists and technicians, using
American universities for the training. Roosevelt then suggested that the Sultan
could engage American firms to carry out the development program he had in mind,
on a fee or small percentage basis. American aid would not be exploitative, said
FDR, nor would it ask for control of resources or political institutions. Churchill
was described as "glowering" when he left the room.
A year later, in a speech
to the Negro News Publishers Association, Roosevelt gave additional description
of the conflict with Churchill, referring to his view of colonial rule in Gambia:
"I
am taking up with Prime Minister Winston Churchill at the present time--I think
that he will see the point--the general thought that the United Nations ought
to have an inspection committee of all these colonies that are way, way down the
line, that are not ready to have anything to say because the owning country has
given them no facilities. "And if we send a committee from the United Nations,
and I used the example of Gambia, to go down to Gambia, 'If you Britishers don't
come up to scratch--toe the mark--then we will let the world know.
"Well,
the Prime Minister doesn't like that idea. And his comeback was: 'All right, the
United Nations will send an inspection committee to your own South in America."
(Laughter) [Note: Jim Crow "equal but separate" laws existed in the USA's South
, but on hindsight, Black Spokesperson Chuck D describes the things African Americans
had under this system: "Fight the Power." Highly recommended.]
"I said,
'Winston, that's all right with me. Go ahead and do it. Tell the world. We call
it freedom of the press, and you call it 'pitiless publicity'--you can right a
lot of wrong with 'pitiless publicity.'|"
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Grand Design
Over the course of 1943, FDR became increasingly
frustrated with the actions of the State Department, and its special Subcommittee
on Dependent Peoples. Rather than put forward his proposals for trusteeship, State
Department bureaucrats, meeting with their counterparts in London, came up with
unworkable schemes that Churchill knew could never be implemented. In addition,
no matter how many times Roosevelt lectured the State Department on the need to
avoid postwar regional security arrangements or an over-reaching world government,
the proposals for the new United Nations organization were embellished with "globaloney,"
supported by certain British factions. State was trying to create a new and bigger
Versailles system, with a new and bigger League of Nations, Roosevelt told his
trusted aides, and he did not want to walk down the failed path of the anglophile
agent Woodrow Wilson.
In December 1943, FDR expressed his frustration to
his son Elliot:
"You know, any number of times the men in the State Department
have tried to conceal messages to me, delay them, hold them up somehow, just because
some of those career diplomats over there aren't in accord with what they know
I think. They should be working for Winston. As a matter of fact, a lot of the
time, they are [working for Churchill]. Stop to think of 'em: any number of 'em
are convinced that the way for America to conduct its foreign policy is to find
out what the British are doing and then copy that!"
"I was told," his son
reports the President as stating, "six years ago, to clean out that State Department.
It's like the British Foreign Office...."
"I'll take care of these matters
myself," was Roosevelt's now usual response on matters of crucial policy. "I am
the only person I can trust."
The State Department prepared voluminous briefing
books and policy papers for the November 1943 Cairo meetings with Chiang Kai-shek
and Churchill and the Teheran meetings with Stalin and Churchill. Roosevelt not
only left the books behind--he left all State Department officials behind, to
stew in Washington!
According to first-hand accounts, Roosevelt went to
Cairo with the outlines of a global "grand design" for the last stages of the
war and the postwar world. The war in Europe was to be ended as quickly as possible,
with the cross-Channel invasion of the continent, long postponed by Churchill's
maneuvers, implemented at a fixed date certain within six months. In the meantime,
full support was to be given to MacArthur's strategy of moving toward Japan, by
bypassing strongholds, with no "sideshows" as proposed by the British. Japan was
to be isolated and effectively destroyed, without a costly invasion of the mainland,
by conventional military means. Its collapse was to be insured by a Soviet invasion
of Manchuria and possibly Korea, as soon as the war in Europe ended. China was
to be maintained as a whole nation, as envisioned by Dr. Sun Yat-sen.
To
sweep away colonialism as rapidly as possible, the U.S. would form alliances with
the Russians and Chinese, as a block against the fourth allied power, the British.
Together, the Big Four, or as FDR called them, "The Four Policemen," would militarily
guarantee the peace, with the United Nations organization serving as a coordinating
body to promote global economic development.
Roosevelt believed that he
could sell this vision to both Stalin and Chiang; if he could do that, Churchill
and the British could be dragged kicking and screaming into the new order.
Roosevelt
saw it as necessary to attack the defacto imperial alliance between the French
and the British; the French, he told his son, while outwardly hating the British,
had adopted Britain's imperial outlook, and taken their side on such issues. For
that reason, Roosevelt said that he would not allow Indochina to be returned the
the French. When his son raised some issue with this, stating that her colonies
"belonged to France," the President shot back:
"How do they belong to France.
Why does Morocco, inhabited by Moroccans belong to France? Or take Indochina.
The Japanese control that colony now. Why was it a cinch for the Japanese to conquer
that land? The native Indochinese have been so flagrantly downtrodden that they
thought to themselves: 'Anything must be better than to live under French colonial
rule!' Should a land belong to France? By what logic and by what historical rule....
I am talking about another war, Elliot. I am talking about what will happen to
our world, if after this war we allow millions of people to slide back into semi-slavery!"
At
Cairo, Roosevelt huddled for hours, alone, with Chiang, while Churchill fumed.
He told the Chinese leader that the U.S. was prepared to help make China into
a great power, but that Chiang would have to find a way to create a government
of national unity with the communists, rather than allow the country to split.
He informed Chiang that he was prepared to force the British to return Hong Kong
to the Chinese, provided that Chiang would then agree to place it under international
trusteeship to operate as a "free port." Roosevelt assured the Chiang that he
was prepared to end "all colonial empires" in the Pacific, and assured him that
this would not be replaced by an American "imperium." In Teheran, in one-on-one
meetings with Stalin, Roosevelt told the Soviet leader of his plans to end all
empires. Stalin, according to some reports, became scared at the implications.
Didn't the President understand that this might mean war, with the British, and
explosions in the former colonial sector? he asked. Roosevelt replied that risks
were going to have to be taken to create a better world. The two leaders agreed
that Indochina would be "liberated," as well as other colonial areas.
Roosevelt,
at least according to the records, never briefed an angry Churchill on his dealings
with Chiang and Stalin, causing the volatile prime minister to accuse him of "secret
deals." However, during the Cairo sessions, Roosevelt made quite clear his intentions,
and the two leaders clashed openly. The President demanded that the conference
declaration include specific timetables on the independence of British colonies
in Asia--which Churchill absolutely refused to consider. Still the draft declaration,
as proposed by Roosevelt, pointedly refused to make reference to restoration of
any colonies to their former masters
Although the communiqué was
better for London that what FDR wished, he came away with the feeling that he
had British in retreat. Churchill, in London, found himself under attack in his
cabinet for making concessions. "We did the best we could," he told them, cursing
at Roosevelt's persistence on the colonial question.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Global New Deal
Roosevelt returned to the U.S. telling his aides
that he believed that they were in the process of "remaking the world." To give
economic substance to his postwar vision, he had a number of groups within the
government working what was dubbed "the global New Deal." While an examination
of the plans finds them disjointed and often partially filled out, one can't help
but feel exhiliration at their breath and the boldness of their concepts. Even
today, these plans find no parallel in scale, except in the economic programs
proposed by Lyndon LaRouche and his cothinkers.
The initiation for each
of these plans came directly from Roosevelt. It appears that this President was
keenly interested in economic development, and had ideas about how to do it in
every corner of the globe.
A small sample of what was under discussion gives
a sense of what he was thinking--and what must have scared the living daylights
out of Churchill and the British imperialists:
Starting in 1939, Roosevelt
began discussing enormous resettlement projects. These are not to be confused
with the British concepts of resettlement used for geopolitical manipulation,
or for the creation of artificial states. Roosevelt was proposing huge colonization
programs, to develop areas of the world presently underpopulated or undeveloped.
Roosevelt's view was that there were large numbers of people--either refugees
or others seeking to immigrate--who should be given a "mission" similar to the
sense of those who colonized the New World. They could be directed to parts of
the world that needed "development cadre." Everything that had been thought about
these matters, previously, by others, had been wrong, because they were thought
of on too small a scale, and without the sense of linking science to the project.
Roosevelt proposed that there be surveys done of Asia, Africa, Australia, and
North and South America, to determine areas of millions of square miles for resettlement.
Plans would then be drawn to develop infrastructure, irrigation systems, cities,
farming, etc. The resettlers could come in waves: first those to build the infrastructure,
then those to colonize. All should be provided with modern health and living conditions
and be paid a fair wage. This would be funded by an international consortia of
nations, but that when it was finished, a "new civilization" involving millions
of people would be growing in places that were previously thought to be uninhabitable.
The newly colonized areas would be assimilated into existing nation states where
feasible, and could create new states where it wasn't.
Roosevelt wanted
to build a number of superports at key locations on several continents, to help
speed world trade. He asked the U.S. military to work on plans for such a port
at the head of the Persian Gulf; another would be located in Palestine; others
in Southeast Asia; and another in Baja, California. Such ports, while being affiliated
with individual nations, would be "free ports," and operated by an international
authority, linked possibly to the United Nations.
Roosevelt proposed the
construction of several major rail lines, including lines in China, and a link
through China to Russia. He also proposed to build a rail line across Africa (from
east to west); and a rail line from the new Gulf superport, through Iran, into
Russia and then going east and west.
The President oversaw plans for canals,
in Asia, and a new canal in Central America, and improvements to various international
waterways and straits to promote world shipping.
Water-management and related
plans were proposed for Europe, Asia, (including the Ganges-Brahmaputra River
System of India); in Europe, these plans were linked to the development of hydroelectric
power. Roosevelt commissioned studies to be done for the creation in Africa, Asia,
and South America of TVA-like authorities to develop and operate such power grids.
The
most graphic evidence of his concept of large-scale planning paving the way for
new peaceful, economic arrangements is in the Middle East. He proposed massive
irrigation plans for the Sahara; water, said FDR, could be pumped from abundant
underground rivers and streams, for use in a gigantic reforestation project. Oil
resources should be developed as a part of this larger project; once water was
available, then modern industrial development could take place as well, and the
whole area would be transformed. He went so far as to appoint James Landis as
director of economic operations for the Middle East and charged him with the responsibility
for developing these plans.
Roosevelt discussed making Iran a "pilot" project
that would show the world the benefit of applying American "20th Century" methods
to global development problems. He sent Patrick Hurley there to assess the situation.
He
was not in favor of a Jewish homeland in Palestine (suggesting several other areas
for such a state, including Angola), but by late in the war seemed to see no way
to avoid it. With that in mind, he proposed that such a state must be a model
for economic development programs, that it be given resources to show the efficacy
of technology. He proposed, however, that such a state from its inception, work
with its neighbors in the context of the kind of economic development program
he was generally proposing. Otherwise, there would be no peace in the area. If
what he proposed was done, then he foresaw a possible federation of Syria, Lebanon,
Palestine, and Trans-Jordan, within which there would be no currency or trade
barriers, which would work on cooperative projects in large-scale irrigation,
power development, and communications. The economic benefits, FDR said, would
provide the basis for the end of Arab-Jew hostility.
Occasionally, he put
forward these plans when the British were present, as if to taunt them. One such
forum was the Pacific War Council, which met in Washington from 1942 to early
1944, with FDR chairing almost every meeting. At one, he proposed bringing several
million people, including Chinese, to Australia. Lord Halifax, the British ambassador
became apoplectic.
At another, he laid out far-reaching plans for Asian
development. At Roosevelt's direction, the U.S.A. submitted a general plan for
postwar development that FDR intended as a model for other areas. Titled, "After
the War: Security," it was premised, to anger of Halifax and London, on the end
of colonial empires, and was focussed in large part on economic development. It
was divided into two general concepts, with specific planks: 1) the coordination
of the economies of each country for development purposes and their coordination
with other countries in the world; and 2) finance and the matter of payment of
obligations. The plan called for the creation of a world standard monetary unit,
and suggested that it be called the "Demo," for democracy. Roosevelt, according
to reports, enthusiastically presented the proposal, explaining the benefits that
each and every citizen would derive.
At one point, Roosevelt began a discourse
on debt. He noted that too many Pacific nations had borrowed money from the United
States and its private banks to finance their public works. These loans usually
called for repayment at high rates of interest, creating long-term indebtedness.
He did not want that to happen anymore in the postwar world. FDR said that he
wanted to create low-interest credits for projects and programs and wanted to
work toward a coordinated plan to eliminate the interest rate problem completely.
He proposed that steps be taken by governments to bring this about. Halifax sensed
that something bigger was at stake and questioned how there could be such a broad
plan only for the Pacific. The President, he said, was proposing major changes
that would have impacts on the rest of the financial world, including his own
country. "So be it," replied Roosevelt.
The President was asked what economic
experts thought of such radical ideas. Roosevelt said that he welcomed ideas from
everyone, including the people at this table. He stated that "cooperative allies"
did not need to be, or need, "economic experts" to make their plans work. "I realize
that the 'experts' would probably attack this proposition [about debt and interest]
with enthusiasm," Roosevelt said, "however, I have come to realize that nearly
all taught me in college about economics by the 'experts' has been proven wrong!"
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Through to the End
Running for an unprecedented fourth term in 1944,
Roosevelt used the election campaign to educate Americans about their special
responsibility in the creation of the postwar world. It is in the interest of
America, he told them in several speeches, to rebuild the world in its image,
to give hope and prosperity to millions. The campaign to make the world's population
truly free from want, as he had promised in his Four Freedoms speech three years
earlier, would mean jobs and prosperity for Americans: It was in our own best
interests to see others prosper. Speaking at the meeting of the International
Labor Organization in May, was broadcast nationally, Roosevelt dsecribed the horrors
of the British imperial system in Gambia, he said:
"I think that we can
get somewhere if we keep that idea of being 'agin'--as we say in Irish-American--'against'
exploitation everywhere. It would be an awfully good thing for all of us...."
However,
Roosevelt balked at enlisting the American people into his fight against Churchill
and the British Empire. That would have to wait, he told aides, until after the
war was won on the battlefields.
The British responded to the threat Roosevelt
represented through the mouth of GOP candidate Thomas Dewey, who was controlled
by John Foster Dulles. Dewey claimed that Roosevelt and the New Deal apparatus
responsible for his economic proposals were "communists" and that Roosevelt, if
elected, would turn the country over to the "Reds." [Note: as the shameful facts
have come out, Dulles is the brother of Allan Dulles, the head of the CIA. Throughout
his tenure the CIA relied on the hype fed to them by indoctrinated Nazi Reinhard
Gehlen and used this highly biased disinformation to make policy decisions. The
Dulles brothers are infamous for overthrowing the democratically elected government
of Guatemala by putting in its place a military dictatorship that has caused bloodshed
and misery to this day. They did this to secure their hold on United Fruit profits
in Chiquita Bananas.]
Churchill, meanwhile, was prepared to stall. FDR suffered
from serious heart problems and hypertension, although his own physicians thought
that he could survive through a fourth term. By late 1944, Churchill was in receipt
of a secret briefing on the President's health by Churchill's personal physician
Lord Moran: Roosevelt had only several months to live, at best, perhaps a year.
(It
cannot be ruled out that the British may have had a direct hand in the President's
deteriorating health. it is certainly the case that Churchill, through his insistence
on two summits in Canada during the height of the campaign, and his delay of the
proposed summit with Stalin until it required a precarious, 12,000-mile mid-winter
trip to Yalta, deliberately caused strain and helped wear out Roosevelt. Doctors
have since stated that the strain of the Yalta trip may have taken several months
or even a year from Roosevelt's life.)
At Yalta in February 1945, Roosevelt
continued to doggedly pursue the policies that had guided him since 1941. He sought
and won from Stalin an agreement to keep China whole, to allow for a coalition
government between the Communists and Chiang, and to make it one of the "Big Four."
He also gained specific agreement for Russian entry into the war against Japan;
for Roosevelt, who was in possession of secret military briefings from MacArthur's
spies in Japan, a Russian invasion of Manchuria and attacks on Korea would mean
that an invasion of the Japanese mainland was not necessary. (Immediately upon
his return to the United States, Roosevelt, in reviewing invasion plans, with
MacArthur's full consent, put them all on hold. His son Elliot, as well as others
close to him, say that FDR already believed that the military use of the atomic
bomb was unncecessary to gain a victory over Japan and would have never consented
to its use on populated areas.)
Roosevelt believed that he would be personally
able to force Stalin to abide by his agreements; he expressed more fear about
duplicity from the British than from the Soviet leader.
The records of the
February 1945 Yalta meeting, now public, also show that Roosevelt put on the table
his plans to place the British Empire under international supervision, as a step
toward dismantling it. According to Elliot Roosevelt, Churchill responded with
rage:
"I will never agree to the fumbling fingers of 40 or 50 nations prying
into the existence of the British Empire.... While there is life in my body, no
transfer of British sovereignty will be permitted."
On Feb. 23, 1944, during
his return from Yalta aboard the U.S.S. Quincy, Roosevelt held an "off the record"
press briefing for reporters. He told them of his extraordinary plans to make
the deserts bloom in the Middle East, using oil resources for vast irrigation
programs. Roosevelt explained that, in his mind, this was what the new United
Nations was going to be all about.
He then stated that he was not going
to allow the French to reclaim Indochina and that Stalin and Chiang were in agreement
with him:
"With the Indo-Chinese, there is a feeling that they ought to
be independent but they are not ready for it. I suggested at the time, that Indo-China
be set up under trusteeship--have a Frenchman, one or two Indo-Chinese, a Chinese,
and a Russian because they are on the coast, and maybe a Filipino and an American--to
educate them for self-government.... "Stalin liked the idea. Chiang liked the
idea. The British don't like it. It might bust up their empire, because if the
Indo-Chinese were to work together and eventually get their independence, the
Burmese might do the same thing to England. The French have talked about how they
expect to recapture Indo-China, but they haven't got any shipping to do it with.
"It
[Roosevelt's idea of trusteeship for Indo-China] would only get the British mad.
Chiang would go along. Stalin would go along. As for the British, it would only
make the British mad. Better to keep quiet, just now.
"Is that Churchill's
idea on all territory out there, that he wants it back just the way they were?"
Roosevelt was asked. He replied, "Yes, he is mid-Victorian on all things like
that."
A reporter asked FDR whether Churchill's position weren't "inconsistent
with a policy of self-determination [as expressed in the Atlantic Charter, for
example]?"
"Yes, that is true," Roosevelt replied. The reporter informed
the President that Churchill had just the other day reiterated that the principles
in the Atlantic Charter, including the clause that gave all peoples held against
their will a fundamental right to freedom, was "not a rule, just a guide."
"Do
you remember that speech the prime minister made about the fact that he was not
made prime minister of Great Britain to see the empire fall apart?" a reporter
asked the President.
"Dear old Winston will never learn on that point,"
said Roosevelt. "He has made his specialty on that point. This, of course, is
off the record."
In his last days, Roosevelt was working on plan, which
he had preliminarily dubbed "Food for Peace," which involved the unleashing of
American agriculture to feed the world, while deploying American technology to
make the hungry nations food self-sufficient. He was also preoccupied with trying
to prevent the British, in particular Churchill, from staging provocations that
would split the United States from Russia, using territorial disputes in Europe
as a pretext; at a cabinet meeting on March 16, one of the last attended by FDR,
according to the notes of one participant:
"The President indicated considerable
difficulty with British relations.... He stated that the British were perfectly
willing for the United States to have a war with Russia at any time and that,
in his opinion, to follow the British program would be to proceed toward that
end."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conclusion
On April 12, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 32nd President
of the United States, patriot, and enemy of the British Empire, died of a cerebral
hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Georgia. Almost immediately, British agents moved
to obliterate Roosevelt's policies and his postwar plans.
Orders that were
being prepared for U.S. ships and marines to take Hong Kong and turn it over to
the Chinese, were aborted. Other plans to prevent the French from retaking Indochina
were cancelled, and American troops in the area were told to stand aside. The
imperial flags went back up, as Churchill had been demanding, all over the world.
Later
that same month, in San Francisco, the American delegation to the United Nations
conference voted against proposals that were aimed at placing the British and
French colonial possessions under international supervision and with a definite
timetable for independence. America, said delegation leader Harold Stassen, had
but one true ally, the British, and we must always stand by her side. The United
Nations, taken over by a pack of British agents, including Julian Huxley, soon
became a tool for British imperial interests.
In August, President Truman,
manipulated by the British agent Henry Simpson, dropped atomic bombs that Roosevelt
never planned to use on a nation already prepared to surrender, claiming to "save"
American lives in an invasion of Japan--which FDR and his top military commanders
knew was unncessary.
Not one of the economic development projects proposed
by Roosevelt and already in planning stages, ever saw the light of day.
Roosevelt
had failed to develop a leadership cadre to carry on without him. This was, in
part, because of his own leadership style, which tended to centralize important
decision-making in himself and which often manipulated even his closest aides
against each other. Ultimately, he found that aides, like Hurley, were unable
to generate ideas or policy. He groomed no political successor, and within the
patriotic faction which had, sometimes reluctantly, been forced to follow his
leadership, there was no one who could hold a candle to FDR.
But, Roosevelt
was also unable, because of his own limited comprehension of the history of the
ideas that informed his thinking, to explain them in their most profound sense
to others. He was a patriot, with great instincts, and human compassion, but he
had an imperfect understanding of the history of the conflict that he found himself
in the middle of: The battle between t he American republican tradition and British
oligarchism. Those closest to him, often themselves infected with the disease
of anglophilia, failed to understand this fight; and without him present, they
were easy pickings for skilled British operatives.
FDR was arguably the
greatest American President of this century, who understood how to use the power
of the presidency as no individual before or since. He was, as President, the
best at organizing the American citizenry behind a program. Yet, though at war
with the British Empire and all it stood for, Roosevelt never brought the American
people fully into that battle, never told them of the depths of his disagreements
with Churchill. He said he was waiting to do this until the war's end, but it
never happened. In the absence of a population mobilized against the British,
the invidious Harry Truman, handled for the British by Simpson and Jimmy Byrnes,
could reverse the direction of Roosevelt's policies. We thus continue suffer the
consequences from this fatal error of Roosevelt's judgment.
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Notes
In compiling this paper, the author relied, as much as possible,
on direct sources, including speeches, transcipts, and reports of meetings and
declassified papers from the White House and elsewhere. These primary sources
to differed with major published secondary accounts of the period to the point
that these secondary accounts are suspect as deliberate disinformation and misdirection.
Works which attempted to truthfully address the policy issues are:
Elliot
Roosevelt, As He Saw It. (New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1946)
William
Roger Louis, Imperialism at Bay: The United States and the Decolonization of the
British Empire 1941-45. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1978)
Robert
A. Divine, Roosevelt and World War II. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1969)
Willard
Range, Franklin D. Roosevelt's World Order. (Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia
Press, 1959)
Christopher G. Thorne, Allies of a Kind: The United States,
Britain and the War Against Japan, 1941-45. (New York: Oxford University Press,
1978)
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