Winston Churchill - The Hinge of Fate
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The Hinge of Fate
Winston S. Churchill
In War: Resolution
In Defeat: Defiance
In Victory: Magnanimity
In Peace: Good will
I MUST AGAIN ACKNOWLEDGE the assistance or those who helped me with the previous volumes, namely, Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Pownall, Commodore G. R. G. Allen, Colonel F. W. Deakin, and Sir Edward Marsh, Mr. Denis Kelly, and Mr. C. C. Wood. I have also to thank the very large number of others who have kindly read these pages and commented upon them.
Lord Ismay has continued to give me his aid, as have my other friends.
I record my obligation to His Majestys Government for permission to reproduce the text of certain official documents of which the Crown Copyright is legally vested in the Controller of His Majestys Stationery Office. At the request of His Majestys Government, on security grounds, I have paraphrased some of the telegrams published in this volume. These changes have not altered in any way the sense or substance of the telegrams.
I wish to acknowledge my debt to Captain Samuel Eliot Morison, U.S.N.R., whose books on naval operations give a clear presentation of the actions of the United States Fleet.
I am indebted to the Roosevelt Trust for the use they have permitted of the Presidents telegrams quoted here, and also to others who have allowed their private letters to be published.
I N The Gathering Storm, Their Finest Hour, and The Grand Alliance I have described as I saw them the events leading to the Second World War, the conquest of Europe by Nazi Germany, the unflinching resistance of Britain alone until the German attack on Russia and the Japanese assault brought the Soviet Union and the United States to our side. In Washington, at the turn of the year, President Roosevelt and I, supported by our Chief Military and Naval Advisers, proclaimed The Grand Alliance, and prescribed the main strategy for the future conduct of the war. We had now to face the onslaught of Japan. Such was the scene when on January 17, 1942, I landed at Plymouth; and here the tale of this volume begins. Again it is told from the standpoint of the British Prime Minister, with special responsibility, as Minister of Defence, for military affairs. Again I rely upon the series of my directives, telegrams, and minutes, which owe their importance and interest to the moment in which they were written, and which I could not write in better words now. These original documents were dictated by me as events broke upon us. As they are my own composition, written at the time, it is by these that I prefer to be judged. It would be easier to produce a series of afterthoughts when the answers to all the riddles were known, but I must leave this to the historians who will in due course be able to pronounce their considered judgments. I have called this volume The Hinge of Fate because in it
we turn from almost uninterrupted disaster to almost unbroken success. For the first six months of this story all went ill; for the last six months everything went well. And this agreeable change continued to the end of the struggle.
WINSTON S. CHURCHILL
Chartwell,
Westerham,
Kent
January 1, 1951
How the power of the
Grand Alliance
became preponderant
Book I
The Onslaught of Japan
Book II
Africa Redeemed
Book I
THE ONSLAUGHT OF JAPAN
Book II
AFRICA REDEEMED
Facsimile of Message in General Montgomerys Diary
Facsimile of Mr. Churchills Directive to General Alexander and of General Alexanders Reply
THE ONSLAUGHT OF JAPAN
The New Shape of the WarAssurance of Final VictoryAnglo-American Nakedness in the PacificPotential Impact of Japan upon Australia and New ZealandMy Correspondence with Mr. CurtinHis Appeal to the PresidentMr. Bowdens Reports of the Peril of SingaporeMr. Curtins Article in the Melbourne HeraldI Accept Full Responsibility for the Distribution of Our ResourcesMy Reply to Mr. Curtin of January 3And of January 14Safe Arrival of the First Convoy at SingaporeExplanations to New Zealand, January 17Mr. Curtins Cable of January 18, and My AnswerA General SurveyThe Australian CaseThe Pacific War Councils in London and Washington Begin to Function.
T HIS new year, 1942, of the Second World War opened upon us in an entirely different shape for Britain. We were no longer alone. At our side stood two mighty Allies. Russia and the United States, though for different reasons, were irrevocably engaged to fight to the death in the closest concert with the British Empire. This combination made final victory certain unless it broke in pieces under the strain, or unless some entirely new instrument of war appeared in German hands. There was indeed a new instrument of war for which both sides were avidly groping. As it turned out, it was into our already stronger hands that the secret of the atomic bomb was destined to tall. A fearful and bloody struggle lay before us, and we could not foresee its course, but the end was sure.
The Grand Alliance had now to face the onslaught of Japan. This had been long prepared, and fell upon the British and American frontsif such they could be calledwith cruel severity. At no moment could it be conceived that Japan would overcome the United States, but heavy forfeits had to be paid by them, in the Philippines and other islands, in the Pacific Ocean, and by the British and the hapless Dutch in South-East Asia. Russia, in mortal grip with the main German Army, suffered only from the Japanese assault by the diversion of Anglo-American energies and supplies which would have aided her. Britain and the United States had a long period of torturing defeats before them which could not affect the final issue but were hard for their peoples to endure. Britain was naked because our strength was absorbed elsewhere, and the Americans because they had scarcely begun to gather their almost limitless resources. To us in the British Isles it seemed that everything was growing worse, although on reflection we knew that the war was won.
* * * * *
In spite of the heavy new burdens which tell upon us there was no addition to our dangers at home. Australia and New Zealand, on the other hand, felt suddenly plunged into the forefront of the battle. They saw themselves exposed to the possibility of direct invasion. No longer did the war mean sending aid across the oceans to the Mother Country in her distress and peril. The new foe could strike straight at Australian homes. The enormous coastlines of their continent could never be defended. All their great cities were on the seaboard. Their only four well-trained divisions of volunteers, the New Zealand Division, and all their best officers, were far away across the oceans. The naval command of the Pacific had passed in a flash and for an indefinite period to Japan. Australasian air-power hardly existed. Can we wonder that deep alarm swept Australia or that the thoughts of their Cabinet were centred upon their own affairs?
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