Winston Churchill's second book in his World War II series covers the time period from May to December 1940. The early weeks of Spring, 1940 were very busy for Churchill, since he had to name all of the heads of the government agencies he presided over as the incoming Prime Minister of Great Britain. Besides structuring a coalition government to run the country, he had to become intimately involved in all of the complicated decision-making attendant on preparing his country for war. He would somehow find the energy needed for almost six years of war while becoming personally engaged in every aspect of British defensive and offensive operations. He held the positions of Prime Minister, First Lord of the Treasury, Minister of Defence, and Leader of the House of Commons simultaneously. On May 13, he asked the House of Commons for a vote of confidence in his Administration. During this session, he gave one of his most famous speeches, announcing "I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears, and sweat" (p. 24).
Churchill's six volumes of this series are must-reads for anyone who wants the full story of how the war was fought. The reason is because he was the only world leader during the war who produced an in-depth, intimate account of his activities during the war. He doesn't miss a single days' worth of the British government's involvement on a number of fronts. His clear narrative writing is supplemented by extensive reproductions of his most important correspondence. He had a great way of incorporating this material, which also helped him to organize his thoughts while fleshing out the outlines of his books. Having unlimited access to government war documents after he was out of office in the late 1940's, he used a team of advisers to collect pertinent letters, memoranda and speeches of himself and many other officials with whom he corresponded. The book publisher set the documents up in print while the advisers collated them chronologically. Churchill, meanwhile, dictated recollections of important events. Everything would be corrected; then Churchill would dictate his six volumes. The benefit to the reader of having the books laid out in this manner is that the numerous supporting documents were inserted into the flow of the narrative history, not only providing a wealth of authenticity but eliminating the need to refer to constant footnotes. Many other documents, not considered necessary by the author for understanding the books' flow of events, were reprinted as appendices.
Maps are skillfully used in the early section devoted to the Battle of France, after the Germans invaded France and Belgium starting May 10. It was shocking to the British, French and other European allies to find themselves witnessing the wholesale gobbling up of Belgian, French and Dutch territory in just a few weeks. The maps clearly show how, day by depressing day, the French and British army divisions were pushed back until the only territory left to defend in northern France by the end of the month was a beachhead at Dunkirk. Several hundred thousand British personnel, and some French units, were able to be evacuated under fire from the Germans, leaving all of their irreplaceable artillery and equipment behind. The reason was extremely poor French military planning and hesitant, confused battlefield leadership, combined with the relentless German advance, or "Blitskrieg". Many French leaders were predicting France's doom even while sizable French units were able to carry on the war in the south and the government was still operating in Paris. Churchill's detailed account of the French government's weakness, witnessed at first hand during several flights Churchill made to confer with his allies, is a testimony to all of the criticism the French received for the manner of their eventual surrender. When it was clear that the Germans were going to overrun the remainder of the country, the Prime Minister, Paul Reynaud, was trying to move the government to France's possessions in North Africa, where the French flag would still fly and the hope of winning back their country could be kept alive; other countries now dominated by the Nazis had kept their national causes alive from overseas. However, defeatism was rampant in the French government. The nay-sayers, led by Marshall Petain, convinced themselves that Britain would soon be conquered after their country. One official summed up their attitude: "Better be a Nazi province. At least we know what means" (p. 187).
Thus began a state of affairs with the great ally, France, lost, not to total defeat, but to capitulation. A French government operated at Vichy under the heel of their German "guests." The British government had to be very careful on the diplomatic front. They didn't want to provoke Vichy into declaring war and joining their German puppet-masters as allies. This would require the British to treat their recent allies as enemies, making the possible eventual liberation of France very problematical. There would be situations that could not be avoided, based on the leading French admiral's decision to prevent his fleet from sailing to Britain or America before the German occupation was complete. On one occasion, the British navy had to fire on French vessels to keep them from falling into German hands, at the port of Toulon.
The most interesting figure in this situation was General Charles DeGaulle, who was evacuated to Britain along with several "Free French" army divisions. He became the leading Frenchman outside his country calling for liberation from the Germans. He had fought his government's earlier decision to capitulate. For this, he was sentenced to death in absentia by Vichy. The British did all they could to enhance his reputation and assist him in landing his forces in North Africa to carry on the fight under the French flag.
All of the above developments were only the beginning of Great Britain's challenges for the rest of 1940. Their army was saved, but they had hardly any arms, at a time when the possibility of a German invasion across the Channel was thought imminent. Indeed, Hitler had pushed his commanders to get started with "Operation Sea Lion". Internal military squabbling was the main reason the Germans couldn't enact this plan during 1940, giving the British precious time to rearm and rebuild. In preparation for a cross-channel invasion, the Germans unleashed air attacks on Britain during the summer and fall of 1940 which caused great destruction and loss of life, the "Blitz." Churchill is considered to be one of the great authorities of this series of attacks which terrorized and killed the citizenry while challenging the country's air defenses, especially the RAF, to the point of exhaustion.
Even if the German cross-channel didn't happen, the British were facing almost insurmountable obstacles caused by the lack of arms supplies and manufacturing capacity to provide all that was needed for defensive and offensive operations. The one great hope was the United States, whose Congress was dominated by isolationist thinking. Churchill early-on courted President Franklin Roosevelt in the hope of finding any kind of way to send American arms to Britain. Hundreds of thousands of small arms were shipped across the Atlantic within the first months after Dunkirk. Of far greater importance was a fleet of fifty obsolete, but serviceable American destroyers, which were needed to combat the growing German submarine threat to Britain's sea approaches. Churchill and Roosevelt cleverly and tirelessly worked to hammer out an agreement whereby the American government would relinquish the ships while the British government would grant long-term leases in British territory, ranging from Newfoundland to the Caribbean and British Guiana, for American naval bases. By late 1940, the British were running out of money to pay for all of the American military material they needed; the solution offered by Roosevelt was to find a way to let the British obtain the arms they needed from America the way that a homeowner whose house was on fire would borrow a water hose from his neighbor, with no discussion of monetary payment in a critical time of need. Thus, "Lend-Lease" became a device which helped the British Isles survive during a time of great uncertainty.
Lend-lease would become one of the greatest mutual assistance programs between countries, ever. Roosevelt cleverly brought the American Congress, and public along, at a time when public opinion was softening to the plight of the British who were being bombed daily. Churchill's prediction that Germany would not react to this assistance with a declaration of war against the United States was correct. Churchill's reasoning was that Hitler preferred to knock off his victims one by one. Nevertheless, America progressed from neutral country to non-belligerent during there early World War II days. The constant ship convoys across the Atlantic could not be ignored, however, and 1941, up to Pearl Harbor in December, saw a state of increasingly deadly undeclared war exist, whereby the American Navy was sailing into hostile territory, trying to escort U.S. merchant shipping which was not always accorded neutral status by German submarines.
Regardless of American losses of life, Great Britain was in the position during the greater part of 1940-41 of fighting its deadly enemies with its recent allies defeated, and its World War I ally, America, standing on the sidelines. This predicament is the basis for the Theme of this book: "How the British people held the fort alone till those who hitherto had been half blind were half ready."
There were many other actions and developments occurring on the political, diplomatic and military fronts as chronicled by the great man in his second volume. The final chapters deal with one of the most alarming: the entry of Italy into the war on the side of Germany. Mussolini created almost as much trouble for his ally, Hitler as he did to his enemies, especially regarding his ill-fated decision to invade Greece. His military's biggest disaster, however, was inflicted on his sizable army in North Africa. The British, alarmed at the thought of an imminent invasion by Italian forces eastward to Egypt in late 1940, decided to take a gamble and unleash an invasion on the Italians. In six weeks, during December-January, the British advanced over 200 miles of desert westward to Tobruk, rolling up strongly-fortified Italian positions. The great Italian army in Africa practically vaporized, with 113,000 of their soldiers captured. The Germans would have to jump in and try to gain back the Italians' lost territory, but that issue would be the subject of a later book.