World War, STRATEGY: President & Prime Minister

  • Share

Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, no men to let a beetle-browed Nazi named Hess run off with the title of Mystery Man of World War II, last week presented the world with the deepest, juiciest, most momentous mystery since the war began.

Both men disappeared. The President went off on his yacht Potomac with Commander of the Atlantic Fleet Admiral Ernest King. The Potomac promptly began sending out meaningless, innocent, provocative communiques. The Prime Minister simply vanished. From London also vanished Franklin Roosevelt's Man Friday, Harry Hopkins. No longer in Washington, or anywhere anybody could find them, were Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles, Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Harold R. Stark, Chief of The Air Forces' Major General Henry H. Arnold, Assistant Secretary of War Robert Porter Patterson. No longer at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, said luncheon-table gossip in New York, was the Navy's new battleship, North Carolina.

Not a soul in London or Washington would tell, if he knew, whether the two chiefs of state had met somewhere at sea. Most shrewd guessers guessed that they had. They imagined the meeting somewhat as follows:

Scene I: Somewhere off the Atlantic Coast the Potomac is hove to in a light swell. A big grey war vessel comes over the horizon. Franklin Roosevelt is taken to it. The warship sets its course to the northeast.

Scene II: Many hours to the east the warship slows its pace. Another warship appears—this one British. The President, on deck, watches a small boat coming near, recognizes from pictures the squat figure in the sea cape, the cherubic face under a white yachting cap.

Scene III: The two men face each other on deck. Franklin Roosevelt's cigaret is burning brightly at the end of his long holder. Winston Churchill's long black cigar, crooked between his fingers, has gone out. The two men shake hands gravely, then the President makes a crack.

Scene IV: Across a table on which maps are spread the two men face each other again. They measure each other, and each measures his own stature, comparing it to the other's, trying to see himself through the eyes of history. The President for a moment remembers cares he came away to forget: the limping defense program, the mounting criticism at home (see p. 27). The Prime Minister feels more secure in the affections of his people; he knows they believe him irreplaceable. Yet he, too, is conscious of shortcomings. He knows he has been too quick-tempered of late, too impatient of domestic problems before the grander strategy of war.

Each knows he has the other in his power. Churchill could come to terms with Germany, Roosevelt could leave Britain fighting alone. Yet for that reason they are dependent on each other, as their countries are mutually dependent. They begin to talk.

They discuss aid to Russia. Because Russia is now fighting the fiercest fight against Hitler, the President has determined that the U.S. should give Russia real and effective aid, even at the cost of diverting some supplies from Britain (see p. 20). With some reluctance the Prime Minister agrees.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

ANDREW J. OSWALD, economics professor, on his study published in Science magazine that found that the state of New York placed last in the nation in the happiness rating
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.