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Most of the "wise cracks" about the U.S. position vis-a-vis the world in the
late '30s demonstrate a remarkable combination of arrogance and ignorance. For most American opinion makers the experiences of U.S. participation in WWI were less than satisfactory. The monumental ineptitude of French and British commanders was memorialized in a series of post-War flicks (such as "All Quiet on the Western Front"). The writing of men like Hemmingway had stripped the glory from war. The general attitude was if the foolish Europeans want to slaughter each other in vast numbers, God bless 'em. It was clear to the U.S. administration that war in Europe was inevitable and that U.S. interests would demand U.S. participation. Given the general population's feelings, any governmental action (particularly during Depression era times) had to be considered. Actions there were. In fact, every major U.S. combat aircraft of WWII was conceived and the prototypes at least on the drawing board by the end of 1940. That year also saw the passage of the first peacetime draft in U.S. history, the Two Ocean Navy Act, and Lend-Lease. A very late start in the deveopment of armored vehicles and doctrine was being addressed. The foundations of the Arsenal of Democracy were being laid. The Japanese ended American political divisions on "the war question." Bill Kambic If, by any act, error, or omission, I have, intentionally or unintentionally, displayed any breedist, disciplinist, sexist, racist, culturalist, nationalist, regionalist, localist, ageist, lookist, ableist, sizeist, speciesist, intellectualist, socioeconomicist, ethnocentrist, phallocentrist, heteropatriarchalist, or other violation of the rules of political correctness, known or unknown, I am not sorry and I encourage you to get over it. "WaltBJ" wrote in message om... IS the Rafale dead? Nobody answered the question. BTW the US armed forces, with the exception of the Navy, didn't have anything to fight with in 1941, let alone 1939. Look it up. Walt BJ |
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