This book was extremely enlightening when contemplating the actors and events that led the United States to enter the Second World War. Although I have studied this war in great detail for the past decade, I never really understood how the Battle of the Atlantic unfolded from the American perspective. The first page of the book opens up to the progressive extension of US Naval Patrols in the Atlantic and shows how the US went from patrolling 3 miles of the Atlantic coast in August 1939 to patrolling the entire Atlantic and occupying Iceland.
To me, the most fascinating part of the book was understanding the role the British Security Coordination played in encouraging the US to enter the war. Led by William Stephenson,this intelligence racket went from handing out pro British pamphlets on the street of New York, to paying off Hollywood to show anti-Nazi films, to skewing interventionist questions on the Gallup Poll. They even went as far as to provide the Roosevelt administration in October of 1941 with a counterfeited map of German plans of invasion of North and South America. Roosevelt most likely knew the map was a forgery but nonetheless wanted to get the US involved in the war against the Axis powers.
I also found it quite interesting to learn how the oil embargo against Japan unfolded in September of 1941. In response to the Japanese invasion of French Indochina, the United States decided to freeze all Japanese bank holdings and halt nearly all trade. However, Roosevelt did not intend to completely embargo the US’s oil and aviation fuel exports to Japan at this time. Given that the United States supplied 80% of the crude oil and over 90% of the aviation fuel to Japan, it represented the critical lifeline that the entire Japanese economy and war effort relied on. Although Roosevelt intended to eventually close this vital lifeline, he permitted continued sale of oil and fuel exports. However, an assistant Secretary of State Dean Acheson, used his authority to completely halt all fuel and oil exports to the Japanese. This decision by an assistant secretary directly led the Japanese to craft plans to attack the US a few months later. (It is also interesting to point out that Dean Acheson would later be appointed to Secretary of State during the Korean War.)
Finally, I found presidential candidate Wendell Wilkie to be a fascinating political character, whose speeches in Congress led to the passage of Lend-Lease and Selective Service (the United States first peacetime draft). In fact, Wilkie’s support to these pieces of legislation were so critical that FDR was heard to remark that “We might not have had Lend-Lease or Selective Service or a lot of other things if it hadn’t been for Wendell Wilkie.”
As for my criticisms of this book, I would have to say it sometimes comes across choppy. This is mainly due to the author attempting to describe such a broad subject. I also would add that I don’t feel like he provided enough of a description of the anti-war movement before the involvement. Although he talks at great length about Lindbergh and the America First Committee, I would have liked him to talk at greater length about the protests at Ivy League schools and in DC. Finally, I found the focus on Shirer and Johnson’s juxtaposed views on the Nazi war machine to be a bit odd when the author was attempting to explain of such large magnitude.
Overall, I would recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in the history of the Second World War and American geopolitics.