American History Tellers - FDR & Churchill: A Friendship For the Ages with History Hit's Dan Snow | 1
Episode Date: December 11, 2024Great Britain and the United States have always enjoyed a special bond, and nowhere has that been more evident than in the friendship between President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Prime Min...ister Winston Churchill. After the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, Churchill went to stay at the White House, part of a charm offensive to secure American help in the fight against fascism. Today, Lindsay is joined by British historian Dan Snow, host of Dan Snow’s History Hit podcast. They’ll discuss the importance of the friendship between the two leaders at a time when the free world hung in the balance, and how their cooperation helped orchestrate D-Day and the liberation of Europe. You can read more about Churchill’s White House visit in the book inspired by this podcast, The Hidden History of the White House: Power Struggles, Scandals, and Defining Moments. Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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From Wander You, I'm Lindsey Graham and this is American History Tellers, our history,
your story. Every once in a while, American history tellers get the chance to talk with someone who loves
history as much as we do. And today it's our good fortune to speak with British historian and TV presenter Dan Snow,
host of Dan Snow's History Hit podcast.
So much of history is decided by large events, battles, explorations, colonization.
But this show tries to also demonstrate the power of relationships in steering history.
The United States and Great Britain have had their share of conflict,
first in the American
Revolutionary War and again in the War of 1812.
But in the centuries since, these two countries enjoy a strong bond, and nowhere has that
been more evident than in the friendship and working relationship between President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
As they led their countries in the fight against fascism,
one of the ways Churchill and Roosevelt came to know each other was during the visits Churchill
made to the White House. And we have a chapter on the first visit in the book that was inspired
by this podcast, The Hidden History of the White House, Power Struggles, Scandals, and
Defining Moments.
And here with me today to further explore the special relationship between Churchill and Roosevelt is Dan Snow. He spent his career presenting history programs for the BBC and PBS,
including an in-depth series on D-Day. We'll discuss how the British dealt with
Hitler before the US entry into World War II, Churchill's visit with Roosevelt at the White
House, and then the culmination of their efforts, D-Day itself. My conversation with Dan Snow is coming up next. institutions, from covert government experiments to bizarre assassination attempts. Follow
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Dan Snow, welcome to American History Tellers.
Thank you so much for having me. It's a great honor.
The honor is all mine because you are a well-known champion of popular history and your show
History Hit covers a wide range of topics, but there's a special focus on the rich
history of the UK, as one might imagine. One figure who looms large in the 20th century
is Winston Churchill.
So I'd love for you to take us back to the early days of World War II, to May 1940, when Winston Churchill had
just become Prime Minister.
What position was Churchill in, in the country, I suppose, at the time?
You know what, Lindsay, you're totally right.
I'm lucky enough to talk about and make shows about history stretching from the Bronze Age
all the way to the present day, really.
But I do genuinely believe that there has never been a more dramatic
week or fortnight in history than in May 1940, where Winston Churchill takes over the reins
as Prime Minister of Britain on exactly the same day that Hitler launches what is probably
the most successful military offensive in history, the Blitzkrieg through France and
the Low Countries, which will see the complete destruction of French, British, Belgian allied armies
in that theatre of war in a matter of days.
And so Churchill becomes Prime Minister at this nadir of the British historical story.
He's staring disaster in the face.
And Churchill has got a big, big problem.
He's got to win a war against Germany on the continent
of Europe, but there are other threats. Italy is lurking in the Mediterranean, seemingly
about to jump into the war against Britain. Japan is threatening the British Empire in
the Pacific and in the Indian Ocean. And so Churchill is juggling this crisis. And the
biggest problem he's
got is he hasn't even really got the confidence of his own political party, let alone the
nation, let alone the empire and the rest of the world. So he's got to go and build
that up from scratch. And he has a very simple strategy. He projects absolutely unwavering
strength and determination. He's going to fight the Germans, no matter what the cost, because he identifies that Nazism isn't like Napoleon Bonaparte, Kaiser
Wilhelm, Louis XIV. Nazism is something that, as he sees it, is pretty much unique in a
thousand years of history. Twisted science, the true dark heart of humanity. So he's going
to project that resistance to Nazi domination, and then he's going to project that resistance to Nazi domination and then he's
going to get the Americans in. He says to his son in May 1940, he says to his son, my
plan is to drag the Americans in. That was it. So the first order of business is shore
up the British front, shore up British politicians, shore up the British people to fight the Germans.
The second order of business is to get the USA involved.
Yeah, this projection of confidence does seem to be at odds with reality on the ground.
Britain's only allies are occupied nations, and America is reluctant to enter the war.
What do you know about this reluctance, this isolationism?
It makes total sense.
The Americans didn't want to get dragged into another horrific war on the European continent. When I go and visit cemeteries, as you've done, of young American men from Nebraska,
from Washington state, and they've travelled thousands of miles away, they've crossed
this mighty ocean to die in a muddy field outside Paris, France, it's completely understandable
the Americans didn't want to get involved, but Churchill needs them involved.
He tells them, first of all, I need destroyers, I need ships.
Secondly, I need aircraft.
And then he goes to a few other things he needs.
And then, by the way, he says to Roosevelt very early on in his premiership, he goes,
by the way, we'll go on paying for as long as we can, but soon we're going to run out
of money and I hope you won't make us pay at that point as well.
So he lays it bare before the Americans. But the Americans, quite rightly, are thinking,
we don't want to get involved in this war. This is Europe's war. This is a war of empires. This is a
war of the old world. Here we are. We've just recovered from the Great Depression. We've
recovered from the wounds of the First World War. America is on its way to building the greatest,
most powerful economy the world's ever seen. They don't want to get dragged into the past in some squabble in the European continent.
So Churchill has to make them believe with his rhetoric, with his speeches,
he has to make the Americans understand this is their fight because it's the fight of a free world
against the horrors of Nazism. And he even says to Roosevelt, by the way, you're going to end up
fighting Germany eventually. You'd be a lot better off fighting Germany when you've still got a free and independent
Britain on your side.
So, this period of early and mid 1940s is certainly a fraught one. Churchill comes into
office in May, but by July and through October of 1940, the Battle of Britain was raging.
Now, this was an attempt by Hitler to control the skies over the UK before an eventual ground
invasion.
Today, it's kind of remembered, I suppose, as a bit of a David versus Goliath story.
But I think it's understood that it's more complicated than that.
How so?
Lindsay, this is one of my favorite stories because it's really one of the areas of history
where there is a powerful myth and that myth just is not true.
The idea was that the German Air Force was so massive
and powerful and terrifying it dwarfed the area for the British Air Force and the British
fought this plucky underdog battle to win and protect their skies from German domination.
Now that's a story that the Brits quite like. It makes us sound kind of cool. It makes us
sound plucky and exciting and tenacious. Actually, you know, the reality is completely the other way around.
First of all, look at the aircraft.
Sure, the German air force was a bit bigger, but lots of those aircraft were obsolete or
they weren't fit for the purpose of resting air supremacy over southern England off the
British.
So actually, in terms of frontline fights, in terms of the planes that were actually
doing the fighting, fast interceptor, fighter aircraft, single seater, armed with cannon and machine guns, state of the art, tight turning aircraft.
Actually, the Brits and the Germans had kind of equal numbers. People may have heard of the
Spitfire and the Hurricane aircraft. Those are the two British frontline fighters. The Mechersmit,
famous Mechersmit 109, a fantastic German fighter. They were pretty equally matched. In fact,
in terms of the aircraft, the Spitfire, I'm obviously a bit biased. I'd say it was slightly better, but
really the 109 and the Spitfire in particular were very, very evenly matched.
But here's the true advantage the British had. They were fighting over home territory.
So if a hurricane or a Spitfire got shot down, the pilot could bail out, he'd pull open his
canopy, he'd jump out, parachute to ground, He could be back on his base the next day, that afternoon.
We have examples of people that landed in the pub, had a few beers, and got a taxi back
to their base.
They were flying the following day.
One pilot was shot down three times in three days.
Each day he managed to get back to base and flew again.
So if a plane was shot out of the sky, it didn't mean you lost a pilot.
Now if the Germans are doing their fighting over southern England, say, when their pilots bail out, they're going
straight into prisoner of war camps. So they're losing far more pilots than they can replace.
On top of that, the British have got the secret weapon, really one of the most important weapons
of the Second World War, and that's radar. Radio direction finding. Absolute top secret.
In fact, it was so secret that initially all those German Jewish refugee scientists that arrived escaping Hitler's Third Reich, they
were put to work on the atomic program because they were considered too dangerous to allow
to work on the radar because radar was top top top secret. So these physicists are like,
go away and see if you can split the atom. And so radar allowed the Brits to see German raids gathering over France and North France
coming across the channel so the Brits could send up individual interceptors, individual
squadrons to shoot down those raids and take a terrible toll.
Before that, aerial warfare was just you go up with your mates in the morning, you fly
around a bit, you hope you bump into the enemy and then you land.
Instead now you stay on the ground until that bell rings, you climb up, you pounce on a German bomber force coming in, you land, you rearm,
you get back up there. Incredibly efficient. So, the Brits build the first ever 3D battle
space for an aerial theatre of combat. And that is the deal breaker.
Now, this was also a time in the UK known as the Blitz, because along with military
targets, increasingly civilian targets were
bombed by the Germans. This is a relentless bombardment that went on for nine months,
a terrible disruption of ordinary life. But I gather it wasn't all just huddling in
shelters or bravely trying to ignore the risks and carry on. This is also a nuanced story.
Yeah, this is very like the Battle of Britain.
There's a useful myth here for the Brits, is that we are people that could just carry on and take it no matter what was thrown at us.
A story of social cohesion.
So elements of that myth are correct.
The German Luftwaffe had come across, they tried to destroy the RAF, they tried to wrest control of the air above southern England in particular. That's failed.
So they turned to terror tactics. They turned to just smashing British cities in the hope that
whilst they might not be able to knock the RAF out of the war, they can erode civilian morale. They
can force the British people to their knees. They thought they could force Churchill out of office
because he'd be so unpopular, and then they could deal with a more pliant British Prime Minister. And so London was attacked for months in a row. There
were fires that were worse in terms of their scale than the legendary Great Fire of London
in 1666. The British did tolerate unspeakable hardship. They had to go down to the subway
stations every night. They had to take shelter in makeshift bomb shelters in the backyard.
They witnessed their streets, their cities destroyed, fires sweeping through, and they
pulled together.
They volunteered to go and fight fires.
They volunteered to patrol important buildings like hospitals.
My great-grandpa was on the roof of a hospital all night.
He was one of the doctors in Hammersmith Hospital.
He'd be up there with buckets of water and sand, putting out his entry bombs as they landed on the roof to protect his patients.
But there's another story about the Blitz, and that is that things did get a bit loose.
There was an uptick in violence and all that street lights were put out.
There was no light pollution, so the streets were very dark.
There was certainly crime when houses were hit and people scavenged through the remains
of the houses and pillaged
what personal items they might be able to find there, food, valuables. There was a loosening
of sexual behaviour that a number of children born out of wedlock rocketed. It was a time
both of people pulling together, but also of individuals looking out for themselves, taking
advantage of dislocation, of crisis. There are stories that were suppressed at the time of people from poorer areas of London,
industrial areas of London, where they didn't have adequate bomb shelters, hardly any bomb shelters in fact.
And they would make their way to the west side of town, to the richer parts of town,
where they knew that affluent people would be in nightclubs, drinking, partying, listening to jazz,
in deep basements protected from the bombing, and they would try and bust in and get access to those spaces. So with the signs of the
social compact fraying, but the government in those days, there's no social media, they
controlled the narrative. The dominant narrative that was put out was of everyone doing their
bit, pulling together, obeying the law and keeping their heads down.
During this time of persistent bombardment, Churchill and his staff are forced to keep
operations running in reinforced war rooms beneath the streets of London.
I know in one of your episodes you visit these war rooms, what were they like?
The government air raid bunkers underneath Whitehall, which is the administrative heart
of the British state, they're some of the most special places in the UK today.
They are a network of tunnels, of bunkers, that
were dug out before the war and in the early months of the war because it was clear that
air power was going to play a critical part in the next war. And Churchill actually famously
liked going up on the roof. He loved watching the bombs fall from the roof of Downing Street
in the Foreign Office. He had to be persuaded to get down below for his own personal safety. So on the occasions when he was down there, there were bedrooms.
You can still go and see his cot, his camp bed. There's a cigar in the ashtray next to
it, his desk. Churchill loved maps. There are maps all over the place. He needed to be able
to visualize where the fighting was and what strength allied and access units were at.
So there's wonderful graphics and illustrations down there
on all the walls.
There was a secure line to Roosevelt down there.
You can still see the tiny little room,
like a little phone booth,
if any of your listeners are old enough like I am
to remember the days of pay phones,
is a little booth where he would go
and have very, very intimate conversations with Roosevelt
through a secure cable underneath the Atlantic.
The air conditioning has been reconstructed, the typing pools where the various liaison
officers were at. Those were just locked up after the end of the Second World War and
only pretty recently really were they declassified and turned into a museum. You can walk in
and see them as they were at the height of the blitz, at the height of the Second World
War. And I think it's one of the most special experiences you can have in Britain.
I thoroughly recommend it.
Pete But it wasn't actually just the British government and military command that was operating
underground because the American media was too. How did news from the UK reach the United States?
Jason Yeah, that's right. I mean, the Americans were very present in London.
And I think the reports they were sending back, the stories of resistance, the stories
of bravery, and the stories of the horror inflicted by Hitler's aircraft, those bombers,
helped to move the American public towards a place where they were ready to support the
British war effort, perhaps even join the British war effort.
One of the most famous journalists
in US history, Edward R. Murrow. Ed Murrow was here in London. He would broadcast for CBS
from a basement below the BBC, the British Broadcasting Corporation's broadcasting house. And he would send daily updates really on the destruction and the death, but also on the
lives of Londoners, the people carrying on trying to make the most of it. So this is modern war correspondence that
your listeners will be so familiar with and he used to begin his broadcasts with the iconic,
what is now the iconic phrase, this is London and then he'd end them by saying good night and good luck.
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Well, Lindsay, now it's time for me to turn the tables on you, because I want to know
more about the American side of this story.
Because after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, America is dragged into World War
II.
Hitler then declares war on the USA days later.
For Churchill, he sees this as something like salvation.
He's actually pleased about that.
He doesn't make any bones about it.
And he jumps on a ship almost as soon as possible because he wants to be in the heart of the
action.
He wants to get to the White House and he wants to meet American decision makers, most
of all the president.
Tell me, how does that trip go and how do they start forging that special relationship?
So with the Japanese attack and Germany declaring war on the US shortly after, America was finally
a full participant in the U.S. shortly after. America was finally a full participant in the war,
but Churchill made this visit—ten rough days at sea, apparently—because he worried
that the U.S. might focus its efforts on Japan rather than Germany. So, he essentially invited
himself to the White House to shore up this special relationship between the U.S. and
Britain and between himself and FDR. But there is this fascinating chapter in the
American History Teller's book, The Hidden History of the White House, that does detail
Churchill's visit to the White House and these two men's time together, which was rather long,
many days and stretching into weeks, full of big dinners and long cocktail hours,
not exactly wartime deprivation. But he was also very political. Their strategy talks went
very late into the night and Churchill, who's always described as a bit of a bulldog of
a man, seems to go to great lengths to show deference to Roosevelt. One story I liked
was that Churchill apparently took to chauffeuring FDR around in his wheelchair, I guess simultaneously
staying very close and intimate while also kind of
subordinating himself. Churchill was a man leading a country in need and he was smart
enough to know how to develop a bond.
When Churchill heard the news of Pearl Harbor, he didn't disguise the fact. He was ecstatic.
He believed Britain was now saved.
Well, I think Britain was saved. This was the moment that Churchill was hoping for, and though it was a dark hope, but he
was the necessary push for the American nation to get over its isolationism and recognize
that the world was on fire and America was needed.
And then Churchill, as you said, jumps on a ship almost immediately.
And he arrives at the White House with all sorts of ideas, all sorts of solutions, and a big shopping list as well. And he writes to his cabinet minister
and says that he was treated like a member of the family, but he's clearly forging a
very, very close personal relationship. Tell me some more about that.
Yeah, well, the trip starts pretty much with a press conference. This is Churchill's introduction to America, and I think he knows that he has an act to
play.
There's a good scene in the book of this first press conference.
The room is filled with both cigar and cigarette smoke, as both leaders were inveterate smokers,
but the reporters are clicking their cameras and anxious to get information from FDR and
Churchill.
And FDR knows that this is his opportunity
to sell the British predicament to the American public
and wants to show off Churchill to Americans.
In fact, he does show him off.
He tells Churchill to show himself to the cameras,
to the reporters and Churchill, in typical bluster,
gets up on a chair and waves his cigar around
as cameras click.
Then one of the reporters asks Churchill in another humorous moment,
Mr. Minister, can you tell us when you think we may lick these boys?
And a slightly befuddled Churchill has to be told what the American colloquial lick
means.
And once he finally grasps it means to defeat, he retorts in a very Churchill way,
If we manage it well, then it will only take
half as long as if we manage it badly.
Right from the start, Churchill is on a charm offensive.
He needs to charm Roosevelt, he needs to charm Congress, he needs to charm the press and
ultimately the American people.
It sounds to me from your book like he needs to charm Eleanor Roosevelt as well.
He wasn't the easiest guest.
He had a man of appetites.
Oh, a man of appetites for sure. But Eleanor,
I'm glad you bring her up. She was not especially pleased with her husband because it was only upon
Churchill's arrival that she discovered he was visiting. Franklin had told Eleanor that there
was a guest coming and that they should prepare for copious amounts of food,
cognac, and champagne. But for national security, he did not tell his own wife that it was the
prime minister who was visiting. And then I learned from your book,
he drank a lot of booze and some of that was before breakfast.
Yeah. Churchill's tastes were peculiar and copious. So he demanded, or I guess requested, that
he have a glass of sherry before his breakfast. And for breakfast, he wanted something hot
and something cold. And well, the Americans obliged. They gave him bacon and eggs, certainly
more eggs than Churchill was probably accustomed to with rationing back home.
And also an unexpected encounter when Roosevelt stumbled across Churchill
completely naked? Yeah, apparently the president wanted to have a meeting right then and he was
told that Churchill was in the bath and that didn't bother Franklin. And it didn't bother
Churchill either. And I think that says a great deal about the two men that maybe perhaps
FDR was intent on catching Churchill at a fragile moment, but Churchill was intent on
turning it to his advantage. He leapt out of the bath, showed his full naked body and
said, see, Mr. President, I have nothing to hide.
It's a fun story, but it does feel like the beginning of a very, very close relationship
between two sovereign nations
fighting alongside each other at war. Churchill and Roosevelt, they managed to keep things very
tight between these two nations. Yeah, I think they had to. The bathroom story is probably
indicative of the relationship as a whole. It is one of shared needs and ideals, but one of testing each other's strengths and weaknesses.
These are two very strong men leading in dire times, and they need to be absolutely certain
that each one of them is trustworthy. It's an allegory for their relationship, but I
think this is a moment in which these men personify their nations.
What do you think was achieved across those three weeks that Churchill spent at the White
House?
Well, I think as we hinted at, it cemented the special bond between these two leaders.
They agreed on a number of crucial strategies. One thing that Churchill did acquiesce to
was Roosevelt's demand for a single command center in Washington and having these supreme
allied commanders in Europe and Asia, one source
of direction for the military operations.
And this might have been in response to America's position in World War I, in which her troops
fought under British and French command and chafed a bit at it.
But I think crucially, Churchill got from FDR what he wanted, a promise that the United
States would fight Germany first.
Because I think Roosevelt and his military advisors had already determined that Germany
was the more dangerous foe with more resources and industrial capacity.
And it's interesting is that there's a mix of good vibes and relationship building, but
also very practical things like pooling shipping and more arms and munitions heading over to
Britain.
So a successful trip.
And the start of a successful, well, you'd say friendship, wouldn't you?
I mean, they spent a lot of time together during the Second World War.
They spent a lot of time together.
Of course, they communicated hundreds, if not thousands of times by letter, telegram
and phone call.
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So if Churchill's visit to the White House was perhaps the beginning of the special relationship,
it was probably all leading to one shared and daring plan. That was D-Day. History Hit
has covered D-Day in vivid detail. I can imagine that this was a plan that went through several
iterations. What were Churchill's early thoughts about striking back against Germany?
This is a great question, Lindsay, because Churchill was initially a bit reluctant to
head back into the cockpit of violence that was Northwest Europe.
Everyone who studies European military history realizes that Northwest Europe is where empires
go to duke it out.
That's where Napoleon, that's where the Kaiser, that's where Louis XIV, that is where the
game of empires is settled.
And it's because of the geography and it's because of the sea and it's because of all kinds of
interesting reasons. But Churchill didn't want to go back there. He'd been in the trenches on the
Western Front in the First World War. He said chewing barbed wire on the Western Front, there
must be other alternatives to that. He was always looking for opportunities, attacking the Baltic, attacking the Balkans, attack
up through Italy.
He thought there must be other ways of cracking this tough European problem, other than just
going landing, marching across France and Belgium like his ancestor done, like he'd
done in 1914 to 18, and dealing with those same casualties.
And so he managed to get that so-called second front postponed
It would not happen in 1942 despite the howls of the Soviet Union Stalin going please land in France
Please take the pressure off me. It would not happen in 1942
Churchill managed to get it postponed. It did not happen in 1943 instead Allied troops would advance up Italy
But it would happen in 1944. Churchill
took a lot of persuading that the plan was in place and they would land with success.
Even more important than the landing, they'd be able to deal with the vaunted German Armored
divisions after they landed.
One of your history hit episodes goes through the very first 90 minutes of D-Day, as if it was in
real time. In preparing for it, you talk to people who were there as the Armada left the British
shores as witnesses and combatants. What was the departure scene like as troops headed out to
Normandy? Well, I could talk about this all day because I've been so lucky to meet so many of
these veterans. One told me he was a commando and he sailed down out of Southampton, around the Isle of
Wight and there were ships and boats, the biggest fleet ever assembled in history.
Something like 7,000 ships and boats in all and a good chunk of them were in this stretch
of water called the Solent behind the Isle of Wight, very near where I am now actually.
He said as they came down, he was in the first wave and foghorns and horns were going off on the decks of these ships and ships whistles and there was
this sound and he said it was like coming out of the tunnel at Wembley about to play a soccer match
for England. Wembley's our national stadium and he said it was so pumped up that at the exact moment
if my own nan had walked past, my own grandma had walked past in a German uniform, I'd have slotted her on the spot. I'll never forget that, you
know, this is a guy who's 19, 20 years old and he's just sliding out from British shores,
heading across to a very uncertain fate on the German occupied French coast. But in the
opening minutes, that unit, they did get ashore and they got ashore reasonably safely with
not so many casualties.
On the beach they landed, there had been very effective preparation, air strikes which had
suppressed the Germans and their bunkers, there had been a massive naval bombardment, a huge gathering
of battleships out to sea. We have a cruiser, we have a ship left called the HMS Belfast now,
a museum ship, and that cracked some of the porcelain
in the toilets, in the ship's heads, so great were the vibrations caused by the ship's guns
firing again and again. So those shells were landing on the beach and they were suppressing
those German positions, and then there was the floating tanks, these strange floating
tanks championed by Churchill and others, and they would go in and provide armoured
support exactly as those troops, those commandos landed on the shore.
So actually, on Sword Beach, where this one commando I mentioned, where he landed, they
got ashore.
There were some casualties, but they managed to break through Hitler's Atlantic wall and
they were advancing into Normandy minutes after they landed.
There was, of course, one exception to that.
Omaha Beach, where the Americans fought a terrifically hard battle against German
positions. If anyone's been to Omaha Beach, they'll know that there's cliffs there,
there's bluffs. The Germans have the advantage of height. It is a terrifying place to land.
The Germans, for various reasons, were at a greater state of readiness, and the Americans
there took terrible casualties as they fought heroically into and through those German positions.
I'm glad you bring up the German state of readiness because the success of D-Day pretty
much hinged on the element of surprise. Why were the Germans not expecting the Allies to land in
Normandy? You're right, there's tactical readiness and then the strategic readiness as well. And the
Germans didn't think the Allies were going to land in Normandy. It's about 60 miles from where I am
now on the coast of the UK to the Normandy beach,
in fact about 70 miles.
At its closest, the channel is only 20 miles.
So if you go from Dover in Kent across to Calais, it's only 20 miles.
So of course the assumption was they'd attack across the Narrows.
And Hitler was convinced.
Hitler had a meeting with a Japanese military official in Berlin and the Japanese official
reported it back to Japan.
And we were able to, we know this because the code breakers at the time were able to
decrypt and intercept this message.
It's reported that Hitler was sure there'd be a diversionary attack in Normandy, but
the main attack would come across the Narrows in Calais.
And that's for several reasons.
Double agents were feeding Hitler that information.
There was something called Operation Fortitude, which was a massive deception campaign.
There was a fake US Army group.
The best general, the allied best general, was thought to be General Patton, the American
general who'd showed his excellence in North Africa and Italy.
And he was stuck in Kent, he was furious about that.
He was stuck in Kent with a fake army, issuing orders, making public appearances, inspecting dummy
tanks made out of plastic and balsa wood and rubber, fake landing craft. So he was making
as much noise as he could in Kent, while the real force left from the area where I am now,
around the Isle of Wight, Portsmouth and Southampton, and went that further distance across the
Channel.
So the Allies just ran rings around the Germans. There was another fake army in Scotland, in fact, to make the Germans believe that actually the second front
would be Norway. It would drive the Germans out of occupied Norway. So the Germans did
not have a clue what was going on. And as a result, when even after D-Day landings had
begun, Hitler was not convinced this was the main effort. Hitler wanted to keep elite units
in and around Calais to wait for the allied
landings there that he was expecting at any time.
So as this operation goes on, minutes turn to hours, I assume it is a tense time with
Churchill and Roosevelt in London and Washington. Closely monitoring events, but far away from
the action. What did Churchill say to the House of Commons?
Jason Vale This is a great moment because in fact,
Churchill was fierce. Churchill wanted to be present at D-Day. And in fact, Eisenhower was
fierce at Churchill. Churchill wanted to go along on one of the battleships and watch the bombardment
and be there as it was all happening. And in the end, King George VI said, you are absolutely
not to go to D-Day.
So instead, Churchill was in the UK and he went to Parliament on the 6th of June, on
the day of those D-Day landings.
It's just a reminder that in parliamentary democracies, the business of being accountable
to Parliament didn't come to an end.
Just as the American elections went ahead, even though it was the time of war, so Churchill
had to pay attention.
He had to go to parliament and he had to inform MPs and via the MPs, their constituents, the
British people, he had to inform them on the progress of the war.
Churchill shares, this speech is so exciting, he shares the kind of intelligence that he's
getting from the battlefield.
He says, reports are coming in in rapid succession.
So far the commanders
who are engaged report that everything is proceeding according to plan. And what a plan!
He calls it this vast operation, undoubtedly the most complicated and difficult that has
ever taken place. And I'm not sure he's wrong about that. I mean, he's always a little bit
of Churchill overstatement. But actually, in June 1944, it's hard to think of anything that had ever taken place on a bigger scale than D-Day.
And he goes through some of the challenges that the troops faced.
He talks about how tactical surprise has been attained, and we hope to furnish the enemy
with a succession of surprises during the course of the fighting.
And then, as with all these Churchill speeches, he comes back to one of his central points,
and that is the centrality of his alliance with the United States of America.
He says, complete unity prevails through the allied armies.
There is a brotherhood in arms between us and our friends of the United States.
The quickest way to win World War II was the great powers working as closely
as possible together, and that's particularly the United States and the British Empire.
And Hitler's only chance of success, for example, by this stage, is to try and drive a wedge
between the British and the Americans. And Churchill was just not going to let that happen.
I'd love to ask you, Lindsay, is FDR under the same kind of pressures to talk to the
American people on the 6th of June?
Well Roosevelt was.
He was a leader of a nation who was actively involved in D-Day just as much as the British
and by this point had committed much of the nation's treasure and their young men to the
effort.
So he too had to face the American public and apprise them of what's going on.
He did so via radio.
He asked them to join him in prayer,
saying about the men fighting on the continent, that they will need thy blessings. Their road
will be long and hard, for the enemy is strong. He may hurl back our forces. Success may not come
with rushing speed, but we shall return again and again. And we know that by thy grace and by the righteousness of our cause, our
sons will triumph." So, I think he took the same tack that success
is assured. We have been talking about two leaders from 80 years ago, though, while both
very smart and cunning men, they face great challenges. It makes me think to ask what
lessons we can draw from their relationship that we might apply today
in a very different world. Yeah, I think that's very interesting,
Lizzie. I mean, clearly, well, look, we're all imperfect. They were both imperfect men.
There's a huge debate here in the UK about Churchill, hero, villain, and actually he's all
those things. He's everything. He was the man who attempted to preserve the British Empire,
didn't want to give India its independence, and yet the man who also defended liberal democracy in Britain.
He was a bundle of contradictions, a truly extraordinary man, but clearly the right person
at the right time for that particular job. I'm fascinated by coalition warfare. Those coalitions
are capable of delivering such enormous resources, which in modern industrial
total war is the key to success. And when you can harness a coalition, when you can bring together
the intelligence gathering, the manpower, the industrial output, it's very, very hard to
defeat those big coalitions, but they take a very particular kind of leader to make them work.
And Roosevelt and Churchill were prepared to compromise,
they were prepared to give and take, and they were also prepared to accept that each of
their nations, each of their publics had different agendas and that was okay, and their job was
to try and triangulate that. And that, I think, is the great lesson of leadership in a coalition.
You don't get every single thing that you want, but my goodness,
you're a lot more powerful when you fight with allies. I've heard about you, Lindsay.
What are the lessons that you draw?
The lessons of coalition, the strength of coalition is an obvious one. But one of the
larger lessons from Churchill and Roosevelt in particular is the importance of relationships,
building relationships, understanding what trust means, understanding that loyalty is a give and take,
that there are compromises always to be made,
that ego is always to be put aside.
I think from Churchill and Roosevelt
and many, many other great leaders,
this is the lesson you will always learn.
Yeah, you're totally right.
And keep your eye on the big prize.
And you may have to swallow one or two things
you don't like on the way there, but the prize is there.
Dan, this has been an enormous amount of fun,
a bit different than we normally do,
but I enjoyed it so much.
I am a big fan of your history hit podcasts and videos,
especially the most recent one I watched on D-Day.
Thank you for talking to me today
on American History Tellers.
Thanks so much.
I feel I've learned a lot.
Thank you, Lindsay, for that.
That was my conversation with historian and broadcaster Dan Snow. Check out his podcast
Dan Snow's History Hit wherever you get your podcasts.
From Wondery, this has been a special episode of American History Tellers. For more on Churchill's
visit to the White House, check out the book inspired by this podcast, The Hidden History
of the White House, Power Struggles, Sc this podcast, The Hidden History of the White House,
Power Struggles, Scandals, and Defining Moments. You can find more information about the book in our show notes.
On the next episode, we'll be wrapping up our series on the Transcontinental Railroad with an interview with Su Li,
historian and former executive director of the Chinese Historical Society of America.
She joins me to talk about the experience of Chinese railroad workers, the dangers they faced, and the legacy they left.
If you like American history tellers, you can binge all episodes early and ad-free right
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American History Tellers is hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham
for Airship. Sound design by Molly Bach. Music by Lindsey Graham. This episode was produced
by Polly Stryker
and Alita Rozanski.
Our senior interview producer is Peter Arcuni.
Managing producer Desi Blaylock.
Senior managing producer Callum Cruz.
Senior producer Andy Herman.
And executive producers are Jenny Lauer Beckman,
Marshall Louie, and Erin O'Flaherty for Wondering.
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