Posted on 06/17/2017 5:21:51 AM PDT by Kaslin
Today we regard Americas relationship with Great Britain as one of the most important and powerful alliances in the history of the world — we call it our special relationship — but it was not always this way.
If you took an American History class in high school, you are likely to remember four major inflection points in the Anglo-American dynamic:
1776: Independence from Great Britain… Bloody hell!
1812: Great Britain burns the Capitol and the White House… Bollocks!
1914: World War I... except this time we like Great Britain… Cheers!
1941: World War II… and now were best mates with Great Britain… Blimey!
But how did these two global superpowers go from staunch geopolitical rivals to the closest of allies? It certainly didn't happen overnight.
In his new book, Churchill, Roosevelt & Company: Studies in Character and Statecraft, National Humanities Medal holder Lewis E. Lehrman describes, in a strong narrative and with great precision, the tense diplomatic relationship between the United States and Great Britain in the lead-up to World War II.
Great Britain was unpopular in the U.S. in the years following World War I, having failed to pay its war debt to the United States. Many political and military leaders actively rooted for the dissolution of the British Empire. Anglophobia, as Lehrman astutely labeled it, was markedly high.
As we learn from Lehrmans fascinating work, amidst this tension President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill, perhaps the two greatest leaders of the 20th century, formed a close relationship built largely on the mutual understanding that the Nazis posed an existential threat to the free world.
While the dynamic of the Anglo-American relationship was marked by distrust, Churchill, with high statecraft, courted FDR to move America into the Second World War. Thus was created the Anglo-American special relationship that has endured ever since, perhaps reaching its apotheosis in the relationship of President Reagan and Prime Minister Thatcher in their alliance against the USSR.
Behind closed doors, Roosevelt assured Churchill throughout 1940 that American help was on the way. But Roosevelt also had an election to win. He understood that campaigning on the promise of the U.S. fighting another World War could prove politically suicidal. FDR proceeded to make a promise to American mothers and fathers that our boys [would not be] sent into any foreign wars.
Much of Lehrmans book focuses on the efforts by FDR and some of his associates to either delay or avoid altogether American involvement in World War II. Opposing Americas entry into the war, for instance, was U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain Joseph Kennedy, father of future president John F. Kennedy and future attorney general (and presidential candidate) Robert F. Kennedy. Lehrman tells all.
Churchill, Roosevelt & Company provides a flattering portrait of Winston Churchill. While Roosevelt was a consummate politician, always playing to his constituency, Churchill was motivated by one thing only: victory over Hitler and Nazi Germany.
Yet Churchill demonstrates political chops too. Lehrman shows how Churchill spent the entirety of 1940 and 1941 in a herculean effort to build trust with Roosevelt and lobby for American involvement in the war effort. Churchill even went so far as to share sensitive intelligence with the U.S., something for which he was pilloried back home.
Lehrman shows how Churchill understood that the only way to defeat the Nazis would be to bring the United States militarily into the war. Churchill was willing to defeat the Nazis at all costs, even if it ultimately meant accepting the cost that the United States would then supplant Great Britain as the dominant power in the West.
This is perhaps the historical detail that most American history classes forget but which Lehrman shrewdly keys in upon: the United States waged war against the Axis powers while also defeating our greatest rival for supremacy, Great Britain. This is the big reveal of Churchill, Roosevelt & Company. The world political order dominating our lives is founded, in part, upon this largely unrecognized fact.
America reluctantly entered World War II to defeat Hitler. America was by no means brimming with enthusiasm and loyalty to Great Britain. While we recognized the Axis powers as a threat — Germany declared war on the United States within days after Pearl Harbor — America also saw the British as our chief rival for world influence. Our statesmen recognized that in winning the war we would solidify American status as the Wests preeminent global superpower.
Lehrman makes it clear to the reader that Churchill also understood the geopolitical price that Great Britain would likely pay for the United States entrance into World War II. The price for defeating the Nazis would be the dismantling of the British Empire and America supplanting Great Britain on the world stage.
Thus, the phrase special relationship takes on a fair bit of irony. Yes, we share a language and a culture and much history. That is all part of it. But, ultimately, the special relationship is a sort of sibling rivalry in which the older sibling (Great Britain), previously in charge of the family business, subordinated itself to their younger sibling (the United States) as we took over.
The romantic story about Americas heroism in World War II, while true, is sadly incomplete without also recognizing Churchills statesmanship. Here was a noble Brit who was willing to set aside his intense national pride, recognize what had to be done, and bend his considerable persuasive powers to coax the United States into defeating one of the greatest evils the world has ever known, Nazi Germany. That Churchill likely knew that this victory would come at a great cost to Great Britain makes him exemplary both for character and statecraft. The world would be a very different place were it not for Winston Churchill.
Lehrman demonstrates a jewelers eye for detail. He does an excellent job at documenting and capturing personalities, and not only those of Roosevelt and Churchill. He tells the story of a cast of important supporting characters who surrounded the supreme leaders of America and Great Britain. These include important — and colorful! — supporting characters such as Harry Hopkins, Lord Beaverbrook, Dwight David Eisenhower, and many other figures who have entered lore and history. This is a book suffused with human interest.
Lehrman includes excerpts from diaries, memos, and primary historical records of those who supported the Anglo-American alliance and those who opposed it. This work shows, definitively, how the defeat of the Nazis and the Axis Powers was by no means inevitable — an important message, indeed.
Churchill, Roosevelt & Company is a great read. Yes, it explains how the Anglo-American "special relationship" is special, but it also provides many reveals that elucidate our current politics. Most of all, Lehrman, as his subtitle telegraphs, makes a compelling case for how history, then and now, depends on character and statecraft.
Whether or not you have an interest in history, this exceptional work provides powerful lessons for modern politics and for the contemporary world.
I don’t. I have no interest in a country that insists on being ruled by someone who has inherited the power from parents. Sorry, but the monarchy is outdated and needs to be eliminated. Furthermore, the UK is rushing headlong into sharia-tainted democracy followed by full sharia. Not special to me.
There are more immigrants in the USA from Germany than there are immigrants from all the UK.
(I was surprised to learn that recently)
Didn’t used to be. The USA and England were on BAD terms from 1776 till about the 1880s.
England supported Indian uprisings, tried to form an alliance between themselves, Canada, TEXAS and Mexico against the USA over the Oregon Territories dispute which drove Texas to become a state.
Supported the SOUTH in the Civil War by building warships, blockade runners and sending guns to the South.
I have read that it was BUFFALO BILL’S WILD WEST SHOW and Annie Oakley who broke the ice leading to better relations with England.
I should add that by WWI, things were really different. I remember seeing a Political cartoon of Uncle Sam and John Bull shaking hands across the Atlantic. The caption was...”WE Anglo Saxon nations have to stick together!”
I certainly believe that is the biggest reason. It may not be the only reason, but I think it is the biggest.
True. And oddly enough, we might have lost the American Revolution if not for help and support from the French. It’s a good thing the French don’t remember that either!
The Brits would probably lock Winston Churchill up for Hate Speech today.
But he shows us that not much has changed in the muslim world in 118 years.
Churchills Brutal Takedown of Islam
The following is quoted from Churchills unabridged "River War and Reconquest of the Soudan" (1899). "How dreadful are the curses which Mohammedanism lays on its votaries! Besides the fanatical frenzy, which is as dangerous in a man as hydrophobia in a dog, there is this fearful fatalistic apathy. The effects are apparent in many countries. Improvident habits, slovenly systems of agriculture, sluggish methods of commerce, and insecurity of property exist wherever the followers of the Prophet rule or live. A degraded sensualism deprives this life of its grace and refinement; the next of its dignity and sanctity. The fact that in Mohammedan law every woman must belong to some man as his absolute propertyeither as a child, a wife, or a concubine must delay the final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men."
http://thefederalistpapers.org/us/winston-churchills-brutal-takedown-of-islam-means-more-today-than-ever
--Winston Churchill
Three telling events about the British mentality towards the US. In WWI we were neutral most of the war. We hear endless talk of the German submarines threatening American shipping if they carried war material to Britain. But at the very same moment, if an American cargo ship wanted to carry cargo to a German port, the Royal navy let us know it would be sunk. They were enforcing a blockade against a neutral country. That is an act of war. This exact reason is why we never blockaded north Vietnam.
Two, when we were brought into WWI by Wilsonian era progressives, our Army arrived in Europe. The Brits fully intended to have American soldiers under British command, using them as replacements, and letting the substandard Brit Generals feed them into their meatgrinder attacks.
Three, in the postwar negotiations for the Naval treaty, the Brits demanded twice as many battleships as the USA would get. They said it was because they had “responsibilities” in the atlantic and pacific. In reality, they still believed they might need to defeat the US navy in some future conflict.
The Brits love the “special relationship” bullcrap. But they see it as they get an outsize voice and we provide the muscle and money.
And now today, within a decade or two they elect a moslem PC and government. And they government will be in charge of 4 trident nuclear submarines. We really should be preparing for the UK to be a hostile Islamic nuclear power.
Incorrect, it was indeed a revolution. Revolution does not mean completely destroy society and rebuild it. Revolution according to the dictionary:
“a forcible overthrow of a government or social order in favor of a new system.
synonyms: rebellion, revolt, insurrection, mutiny, uprising, riot, rioting”
It was to overthrow British rule and establish a new government.
“I remember seeing a Political cartoon of Uncle Sam and John Bull shaking hands across the Atlantic. The caption was...WE Anglo Saxon nations have to stick together!”
A propaganda cartoon. They also had cartoons of Germans catching Belgian babies on bayonets.
Little known fact, in WWI the war to make the world safe for democracy, the German soldier could vote. The overwhelming majority of British soldiers could not. They get the right to vote AFTER the war.
At the time Finland was hailed because it paid its share of WWI war reparations.
I think Churchill must have already recognized that GBs day as the dominant power was over. What needed to be done was to stop the Nazis and salvage what they could of the empire with the help of what was clearly becoming a new dominant power yet not an existential threat. Not to take away from Churchill, who was the greatest leader of his time, but I don’t believe he sacrificed GB’s dominance willingly out of some great moral calculus.
I had no idea about differences in soldier’s voting.
Learn something new everyday here.
Fights within a family are usually the worst. It takes time to get over them, especially when one of the parties sees itself as parent over child, but cousins are cousins and outsiders beware.
The British were not involved in the Civil War and they did not aid the Confederacy despite their desire to trade for cotton.The British Parliament declared neutrality and 40,000 Canadians fought for the blue and the grey, mainly for the North.
I wish I could remember where, but awhile back I read an article that said that after WW I the British Admiralty began to make serious contingency plans against...the United States Navy.
Germany was finished (or so they thought), Japan was too weak (or so they thought), and France was a firm ally. So who was left to threaten the British Empire? The United States.
and this...
http://www.globalresearch.ca/secret-history-the-u-s-supported-and-inspired-the-nazis/5439236
A neutral ship carrying war material is commiting an act of war. Britain and the US both knew this at the time, although the US forgot it later in the century.
Going to see the “Churchill” movie today. Trailer looks good.
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