The Secret Rift Between Churchill and Roosevelt | Warlords | War Stories

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  • Опубліковано 21 гру 2024

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  • @CharlieBeveridge
    @CharlieBeveridge Рік тому +28

    I think i saw these Warlord docs when they were on TV, but watching a second time has been amazing.. Thank you all involved..

  • @MrMaxcat32
    @MrMaxcat32 Рік тому +26

    Thank you so much from a 55 year old American male , who always appreciates those unsung heroes of freedom from our past & so God bless 💕 Hedy Lamarr, quite the American lady 🥀💯 🇺🇸

    • @CodyHarper-j3k
      @CodyHarper-j3k 5 місяців тому

      Well Roosevelt didn't do anything it was all Churchill. Roosevelt is the weakest leader in history of this country besides Biden and Camel Harris

    • @jryecart8017
      @jryecart8017 4 місяці тому

      In the 1940s, few Hollywood actresses were more famous and more famously beautiful than Hedy Lamarr. Yet despite starring in dozens of films and gracing the cover of every Hollywood celebrity magazine, few people knew Hedy was also a gifted inventor. In fact, one of the technologies she co-invented laid a key foundation for future communication systems, including GPS, Bluetooth and WiFi.
      “Hedy always felt that people didn't appreciate her for her intelligence-that her beauty got in the way,” says Richard Rhodes, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian who wrote a biography about Hedy.
      After working 12- or 15-hour days at MGM Studios, Hedy would often skip the Hollywood parties or carousing with one of her many suitors and instead sit down at her “inventing table.”
      The Hollywood Actress Who Invented WiFi
      “Hedy had a drafting table and a whole wall full of engineering books. It was a serious hobby,” says Rhodes, author of Hedy's Folly: The Life and Breakthrough Inventions of Hedy Lamarr, the Most Beautiful Woman in the World.
      While not a trained engineer or mathematician, Hedy Lamarr was an ingenious problem-solver. Most of her inventions were practical solutions to everyday problems, like a tissue box attachment for depositing used tissues or a glow-in-the-dark dog collar.
      It was during World War II, that she developed “frequency hopping,” an invention that’s now recognized as a fundamental technology for secure communications. She didn’t receive credit for the innovation until very late in life.
      SOURCE, HISTORY COM

  • @lorellemorris1391
    @lorellemorris1391 Рік тому +76

    Wrong Queen Elizabeth was not the Monarch ar this time. It was her father King George vi

    • @shawk8365
      @shawk8365 Рік тому +19

      Referring to King George's wife. Queen Elizabeth..

    • @kolasom
      @kolasom Рік тому +1

      I was wondering!!

    • @chrischetland9642
      @chrischetland9642 Рік тому +13

      King George VI wife was Elizabeth Bowes Lyon so Queen Elizabeth is correct.

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Рік тому

      ​@@chrischetland9642Queen Consort.

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 9 місяців тому +1

      Elizabeth crowned in 1952

  • @dr.barrycohn5461
    @dr.barrycohn5461 9 місяців тому +13

    A good summarization of some of the dynamics between FDR and Churchill.

  • @alanaadams7440
    @alanaadams7440 Рік тому +142

    I think we should not underestimate Churchill. He figured Stalin out early on and rightly he was wary of him

    • @beowulf1312
      @beowulf1312 Рік тому +15

      Unlike Roosevelt who was a fellow traveller of the Bolsheviks.

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Рік тому +16

      Stalin- enslaved 20 million people and killed around 25-30 million people. Most of them died from hunger.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому

      @@beowulf1312 Tell me how many of your colonies voted on being your colonies. It's just genocide and suppression when the other side does it right?

    • @pamelaiverson5527
      @pamelaiverson5527 Рік тому +30

      Underestimate Churchill? Only a fool does that. He kept his country together, encouraged them to believe that victory was possible and made the tough decisions lesser men would have shied away from. He fought at Yalta for the Poles, while Roosevelt was happy to leave them under Russian dominance and then was blamed for how things turned out for Poland. He warned both Roosevelt and Truman about Stalin and was ignored, obviously Americans knew better than anyone else. They could ‘work’ with the mass murderer and take his word. Look how that turned out. He wasn’t perfect by any means, he had his failures as we all know but at that moment in time he was indeed the voice in the wilderness.

    • @lenwilkinson672
      @lenwilkinson672 Рік тому

      @@pamelaiverson5527 Churchill is now defiled by those who where not born,defiled by the woke left and by many of immigrants who talk the hind leg off a donkey about things they conjure up and know nothing about as they weren’t even born.Had we lost the war,they wouldn’t be here today.

  • @ElGrandoCaymano
    @ElGrandoCaymano Рік тому +70

    Error at 3:43. Although they did meet in Jun 1918, Churchill was not "then Britain's first lord of the admiralty", rather that post was held by Sir Eric Geddes. Although Churchill had been a prior First Sea Lord, he resigned in Nov 1915 after the Dardanelles campaign and prior to the US's entry into the war.

    • @kirithathi9070
      @kirithathi9070 Рік тому +3

      ❤❤

    • @daejavue69
      @daejavue69 Рік тому +4

      Well done on doing the research & gave the accurate & true version of events .
      As a born & bred Brit my interest in our British History is constant curious especially the relationship across the pond .
      The comment of Roosevelt on Churchill in 1918 was bad statesmanship added to my knowledge & still being added too & why I'm so interested in this vidio ..

    • @glenbinnie2086
      @glenbinnie2086 Рік тому +2

      Correct, Churchill had got back into office as Minister of Munitions in 1918 but was not as influential as he had been at the Admiralty. Shows the importance of “being nice to people on the way up, because you you might meet them again (when you’re both at the top)”

    • @MarkHarrison733
      @MarkHarrison733 Рік тому

      Churchill resigned because he had caused the sinking of RMS Lusitania.
      The US sided with France and the British Empire from the very beginning of World War I, as it would during World War II.

    • @stevemills9982
      @stevemills9982 10 місяців тому +1

      Churchill was not the First Sea Lord. That is a military post for an Admiral, heading the Royal Navy. He had been the First Lord of the Admiralty, a political appointment.

  • @BallyBoy95
    @BallyBoy95 Рік тому +20

    3:00 to 4:00 mark - Roosevelt refers to Churchill as more than just "a stinker." He describes Churchill as the single most arrogant person he had ever seen, or at least, words to that effect (been some years since I studied their relationship).

    • @robinpreese
      @robinpreese Рік тому +8

      One Churchill is equal to 100 Roosevelt 🇬🇧

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 Рік тому +7

      Churchill had the experience of War and more informed than most. It was conclusions based on knowledge, not arrogance.

    • @lray1948
      @lray1948 Рік тому +2

      And remember FDR had met Macarthur

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 Рік тому +5

      What FDR did not understand was Churchill had the experience and judgement to back his higher intellect.

    • @douglasturner6153
      @douglasturner6153 Рік тому +2

      Churchill may have been like a mirror in front of Roosevelt. Got to be arrogant to go for 4th Term so ill. 😅

  • @jacobc4582
    @jacobc4582 Рік тому +360

    Who needs the Super Bowl when you have War Stories?

    • @negativeindustrial
      @negativeindustrial Рік тому +18

      Yeah, I’m all good the Virtue Signal Bowl.

    • @jacobc4582
      @jacobc4582 Рік тому +1

      @@negativeindustrial same. NFL is rigged

    • @indi3066
      @indi3066 Рік тому +11

      @@negativeindustrial 👍

    • @tundranomad
      @tundranomad Рік тому +21

      I'd rather have a hemorrhoid than watch the super bowl.

    • @wyatberp3611
      @wyatberp3611 Рік тому +7

      You mean the hype bowl..

  • @oscarmadison8530
    @oscarmadison8530 Рік тому +45

    War stories is far more informative and entertaining than the tidy bowl.

    • @BlAcKpHrAcK
      @BlAcKpHrAcK Рік тому +5

      The rotten Uber Bowel.

    • @doogleticker5183
      @doogleticker5183 10 місяців тому

      It is often biased…but what POV isn’t?

    • @AnakinSkywakka
      @AnakinSkywakka 10 місяців тому

      ​@@doogleticker5183In what ways, I am actually curious.

  • @tobys4197
    @tobys4197 5 місяців тому +3

    Thank you from an American who did not live during this time. This is excellent. This was not taught to us in school.

    • @Roz-y2d
      @Roz-y2d Місяць тому

      Of course it wasn’t, FDR was a disgrace!

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums Рік тому +57

    Winston Churchill;
    "Empires, just don't bargain."
    American Attorney General, Robert Jackson;
    "Republics do."

    • @Roodski
      @Roodski Рік тому +4

      Wasn’t even a good bargain either 🙄 British and their empire boohoo

    • @daleburrell6273
      @daleburrell6273 Рік тому +6

      ​@@Roodski ...NOTHING is "FOREVER"- not in THIS world-(!)

    • @jugbywellington1134
      @jugbywellington1134 Рік тому +9

      @@Roodski "Boohoo"? That's what an increasing number of people are sayng about the USA these days.

    • @Roodski
      @Roodski Рік тому +3

      @@jugbywellington1134 at least we never called ourselves an “empire”

    • @jugbywellington1134
      @jugbywellington1134 Рік тому +4

      @@Roodski You make that sound like a bad thing. I suggest you watch Team America: that's how we see you.

  • @samanthafordyce5795
    @samanthafordyce5795 Рік тому +16

    Roosevelt's worry about Churchill's over-use of alcohol denies the fact that his own use of alcohol was also excessive.

  • @elielalonde3714
    @elielalonde3714 Рік тому +11

    At 34:49, The narrator states 'Chuchill confides to Queen Elizabeth...'. George VI was the king then. What a stupid mistake,,,,,

    • @0cgw
      @0cgw Рік тому +15

      Queen Elizabeth was Elizabeth II's mother, and married to George VI.

    • @scottklocke891
      @scottklocke891 9 місяців тому +3

      I believe George VI wife was name Elizabeth, Queen Consort.

  • @blumobean
    @blumobean Рік тому +51

    If Churchill was drunk, just imagine what he could have done sober.

    • @Sabotage_Labs
      @Sabotage_Labs Рік тому +6

      Being drunk likely helped him lol...

    • @WyattBerry
      @WyattBerry Рік тому +13

      Britain needed a charismatic drunkard to get through 1940, 1941 etc.

    • @nickjung7394
      @nickjung7394 Рік тому +10

      His interest in alcohol did not affect his judgement....or his life span!

    • @jennyomalley7634
      @jennyomalley7634 Рік тому

      Churchill King of sarcasm , Sarcasm being the lowest form of wit, he certainly was . If you read about him ( not the stuff written by sycophants ) he's not what the English make him out to be. ua-cam.com/video/UB_Gs-0dhOo/v-deo.html

    • @devannayar6456
      @devannayar6456 Рік тому

      Frankly, nothing !

  • @watchthe1369
    @watchthe1369 Рік тому +27

    Not surprised, both of them were powerful personalities and particularly intelligent, driving on the same roads, but both of them were used to different rules.

    • @cliveengel5744
      @cliveengel5744 Рік тому +3

      The only reason Germany invaded France, Holland, and Belgium was because of the landing of British Expeditionary Forces in France in which they threatened their rear while Germany was trying to mobilize for an attack on the Soviet Union, which was always Germany’s goal, Lebensraum, growing room in the East.
      The UK and France were not the target. Soviet Union could provide oil, timber, minerals, natural gas, food of which the UK could not.
      They had no interest in the UK nor its Empire which was very alien to them.
      So what began as the Defense of Poland which in effect was never accomplished, the action by Britain and France effectively ended the British Empire with the signing of the Atlantic Charter in which FDR insisted on in order for Britain to receive help via the End Lease Act.
      FDR thought Churchil was a pompous man!

    • @watchthe1369
      @watchthe1369 Рік тому +1

      @@cliveengel5744 Look up Von Schlieffen Plan and get back to me. They went through the low countries to get around the Maginot Line. The BEF was put in to enforce the Versailles Treaty which Germany had violated too many times already.

    • @cliveengel5744
      @cliveengel5744 Рік тому

      @@watchthe1369 This had nothing to do with the Great Patriotic War and the landing of the BEF.
      Germain's focus was on Lebensraum - Growing Room in the East and not about France and the UK.
      The Great War was not only fought on the Western Front but in Central and Eastern Europe. It was the last war fought in Europe by these ridiculous Royal Families and consigned them to Regallia and to Marching bands.
      So the Von Battenbergs, the Romanovs, and the Bourbon Kings from then onwards were consigned to history, never again would they fight a war!
      Only the Feathered Caps, the Boars Head Dress, the Silk Sashes, the Swords, the Horses are seen on Bastille Day, during the Trooping of the Color and on Familiy occasion in pretending that they still run the Nation(s)
      You see thing only through a British view which as we know is just false.
      Read “My Beliefs” it was clearly started and Stalin already knew in 1933 that he would have to face Germany sooner or later.
      The British in their hastely signed Treaty with Warsaw, 30 Days before the Invasion of Poland, stumbled into a War they could not win and this cost them their Empire and in signing the Atlantic Treaty, they consigned themselves to be subordinates of the US, which continues to this day.

    • @ktvindicare
      @ktvindicare Рік тому +1

      They werent driving on the same roads, the british drive on the wrong side.

    • @sharonprice42
      @sharonprice42 Рік тому

      There is noreal comparisons between them .Churchill spent most of the war trying to get America into the war

  • @mikekincaid7412
    @mikekincaid7412 Рік тому +10

    All history channel docs are fabulous.. limited in volume yea but great ..never get bored watching them..

    • @Smudgeroon74
      @Smudgeroon74 Рік тому

      @mikekincaid7412 the History channel is not a reliable source for accurate history. It's far too mainstream, leaving out essential information with outright untruths.

  • @pablopeter3564
    @pablopeter3564 Рік тому +78

    At the end, as far as Stalin goal to dominate Central and East Europe, Churchill was right. It was a nightmare that lasted almost 50 years.

    • @davidarchibald50
      @davidarchibald50 Рік тому +9

      The nightmare has not ended. In restless sleep, dreams fever our night, we rouse awhile, then fall back into darkness.

    • @pablopeter3564
      @pablopeter3564 Рік тому

      @@davidarchibald50 You are right 100%. The nightmare has lasted too long, the Russians are still a menace and will remain so.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +11

      Roosevelt's administration had up to 2,000 employees actually working as agents for the USSR. His administration protected them. The US military broke the code for the cables between the Soviet delegation in the US and Moscow, and when Roosevelt's wife Eleanore was informed of this, she notified the Soviets. She betrayed her own country for the communist regime. Roosevelt had as his most important aid a man named Harry Hopkins, who actually lived with the Roosevelts in the White House. He was named as one of the Soviet's most important agents after the fall of the USSR by a former Soviet spy chief. ....
      Roosevelt brought a dramatic increase in central control to the US domestically. One of the originators of fascism, Mussolini, referred to Roosevelt as a fellow fascist. Roosevelt broke the tradition of running for only 2 terms as president, and ran 4 times even though he was very ill. He threatened to pack the supreme court with his yes men in order to push through his authoritarian fascist system, which actually prolonged significantly the Great Depression according to modern academic research

    • @h.e.hazelhorst9838
      @h.e.hazelhorst9838 Рік тому +3

      The question is: did Roosevelt have any understanding of the atrocities that Stalin (and Lenin before him) had committed? The mass-murders, deportations, deliberate starvation… The allies didn’t also did not believe the rumors about mass executions and termination camps of the Germans during the war.

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Рік тому

      SHHHEEE__IT. I've never heard of that before. I know of the post war traitors giving Atomic secrets to the commies, and the infiltration of Britains Mi6, by the Cambridge 4(5).
      Throughout this excellent documentary, I was thinking that Roosevelt was suffering from Dementia.@@johnl5316

  • @bigwoody4704
    @bigwoody4704 Рік тому +56

    "Don't believe everything you read on the internet." ― Abraham Lincoln

    • @timothytakang5407
      @timothytakang5407 Рік тому +4

      Abraham Lincoln??

    • @supa3ek
      @supa3ek Рік тому +4

      lincoln wasnt even around when the internet was invented lol

    • @jordanngolden9341
      @jordanngolden9341 10 місяців тому +9

      @@supa3ek that's the joke

    • @mylegalassistants
      @mylegalassistants 10 місяців тому +1

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @briangraham1024
      @briangraham1024 10 місяців тому +4

      No No, long before then Lincoln said that on telivision. 😂

  • @bertk3923
    @bertk3923 Рік тому +8

    0:25 notice how FDR made churchill lean into the handshake.. wonder if they did that on purpose for this doc

    • @johncrossphd342
      @johncrossphd342 Рік тому +8

      Uh, Roosevelt was an invalid.

    • @papaown
      @papaown Рік тому +4

      And that's exactly how people jump to conclusions without knowing back stories

    • @bertk3923
      @bertk3923 Рік тому +5

      @@papaown lol i didnt think about the polio thing, was just an initial observation

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 Рік тому +2

      ​@@johncrossphd342now they have one with Dementia who falls up Steps.

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 Рік тому

      Roosevelt was Physically crippled unlike Biden who is mentally crippled.

  • @michaelgeraghty3989
    @michaelgeraghty3989 Рік тому +28

    Excellent documentary. I wasn't aware of Roosevelt's view of Stalin and the USSR as a postwar ally rather than the threat that Churchill correctly envisioned.

    • @michaelcelani8325
      @michaelcelani8325 Рік тому +1

      Churchill was an inconsistant man
      with many major defeats in his resume. ( Gallipoli in. WW1. )
      Plus Britain had. DEFAULTED on their WW1 debt to the USA. in a
      arrogant and bullying way. That occured in the early 1930's and is
      almost never reported. That is a
      MAJOR reason Roosevelt did not
      trust Churchill or the British government.
      Also , Churchill was a drunk., and
      that is always a problem.

    • @EvonneThibert
      @EvonneThibert Рік тому +3

      I was living back then: born in August 1940! I never knew that Roosevelt & Churchill didn’t care for each other for many years! I was just shocked!!! 😢🙏😇🫶

    • @EvonneThibert
      @EvonneThibert Рік тому +1

      P.S. Excellent documentary!!!

    • @thehealthychefri
      @thehealthychefri Рік тому +1

      @@EvonneThibert Stalin was the Boss in the Big Three! Both FDR and Churchill, aristocrats and the winner of the Great was was a poor son of a cobbler.

    • @Smudgeroon74
      @Smudgeroon74 Рік тому +4

      @michaelgeraghty3989 did you know that there was a Soviet Union invasion plan of Europe by June 1941. Operation Barbarossa was a pre-emptive strike by Germany and her 5 allies(Romania, Croatia, Finland, Italy and Hungary. There was also 2 divisions of Belgian troops and 47,000 Spanish volunteers, albeit Spain was neutral) to crush the threat of Bolshevism forever. The Russians had 170 divisions of soldiers at Germany's eastern front in June 1941. They were getting ready to invade Europe. Soviet leader Kruschev admitted this fact after Stalin died in 1955. But this is never talked about...

  • @allaneisner4729
    @allaneisner4729 Рік тому +10

    What this documentary showed me is that Churchill deserves most of the credit for building an unlikely alliance with America that snapped them out of their self absorbed concerns. Whether or not that was a positive or a negative for the World as a whole his for real historians to decide!

  • @beverlylevy6559
    @beverlylevy6559 Рік тому +7

    One consideration many people fail to recall is how vast lands Britain controlled vs USA. They were neck and neck in their reach and influence.

    • @timothyayers8596
      @timothyayers8596 6 місяців тому +2

      Britain was falling off and the US was rising up and soon overtook them

  • @JACB006
    @JACB006 10 місяців тому +11

    Well done Mr Churchill … America can be and was a “Fair Weather Friend” with self interest at heart.

    • @veronicathomson5866
      @veronicathomson5866 8 місяців тому +1

      Think Ukraine.

    • @sharongelfand5065
      @sharongelfand5065 6 місяців тому

      In fairness, FDR had to wait till public opinion shifted in order to enter the war.

    • @timothyayers8596
      @timothyayers8596 6 місяців тому +1

      @@veronicathomson5866 The UK is a huge Ukraine Hawk

    • @ET-bg8ru
      @ET-bg8ru 5 місяців тому +1

      Just like the Brits… takes one to know one. Great recession comes to mind.

  • @gracie3174
    @gracie3174 4 місяці тому +3

    Poor Churchill had to beg and humble himself to Roosevelt. God bless Churchill who saved the world! A good and wise man.

    • @priyamastibhati
      @priyamastibhati 3 місяці тому +1

      Saved “world”? How delusional!

    • @bobbyb379
      @bobbyb379 3 місяці тому +1

      @@priyamastibhati “what if” history is always a bit of a pointless exercise as it is impossible to know what would have happened. However, if the UK had capitulated in 1940, it’s very likely that the USSR would have fallen to the Germans. Similarly in the Pacific, the contribution of 2 million Indian soldiers fighting for the British against the Japanese would not have happened. And those Japanese soldiers (which comprised 80% of Imperial Japanese troops in the Pacific theatre) would have been freed up to fight the Americans - massively altering the dynamics of that conflict, particularly in the first 2 years where the US was massively on the backfoot. In all likelihood they would have been forced to sue for peace, leaving the Japanese to continue their conquest of China and Burma (Myanmar) and in all likelihood make a move against India. So, whilst we cannot prove it either way, the continuation of British involvement between the fall of France and Pearl Harbor, did have a massively positive impact on the world as we know it.

    • @Roz-y2d
      @Roz-y2d Місяць тому +1

      @@bobbyb379Well said!

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Місяць тому

      Churchill saved the World Got anymore of those drugs ???. He declared war when Germany invaded Poland - then never did a damn thing when Stalin and Hitler carved it up. But try bullshitting themselves and everyone else that the sun never sets on the British Empire. Yes it did when it was evacuated from:
      -Norway,Netherlands, Belgium and France,Dunkirk in 1940
      -Greece, Crete,Hong Kong and Libya in 1941
      -Tobruk and Singapore in 1942

  • @dtaylor10chuckufarle
    @dtaylor10chuckufarle Рік тому +17

    Sir Winston was right about Poland.

    • @MomMom4Cubs
      @MomMom4Cubs Рік тому +3

      He was right about a lot of things, however he sadly tried to bullishly push through his agenda because he had little patience, or use, for diplomacy.

    • @robertewing3114
      @robertewing3114 Рік тому +1

      Chamberlain was right about Poland, April 1939 brought the world through to April 1945.

  • @Capitalist_Pig314
    @Capitalist_Pig314 10 місяців тому +13

    I am an American. This was a very good documentary. At many times the Nazis could’ve been strangled in the cradle in the mid 30s or earlier by France and Britain. And they didn’t you can’t go back in time and change something when they were standing alone against the Germans, we should’ve been more supportingand we should’ve gotten in the war earlier with our troops and our weapons. Roosevelt comes off as a wishy-washy politician. I don’t know why he’s thought of as a great president. His policies prolonged the great depression for one thing. Churchill is probably the greatest man of the 20th century.

    • @ralphbernhard1757
      @ralphbernhard1757 10 місяців тому

      It was strategy.
      Germany was "used" to balance out the rise of the SU.
      The Limitrophe States like Poland, were the pivot, and the "wall" which were supposed to keep Nazism and Stalinism apart.

    • @philpryor7524
      @philpryor7524 10 місяців тому

      Hopeless analysis and investigation.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 10 місяців тому

      Churchill was an Imperliastic pig and only came to a country they couldn't colonize out of desperation

    • @timothyayers8596
      @timothyayers8596 6 місяців тому +3

      The US population was heavily antiwar. FDR could not have entered the war until Pearl Harbor. Plus FDR had a strategy and it worked to position the United States as the last man standing making them the largest superpower. Too bad the US blew it

    • @sharongelfand5065
      @sharongelfand5065 5 місяців тому

      @@ralphbernhard1757 interesting. Never heard that.

  • @MWM-dj6dn
    @MWM-dj6dn Рік тому +26

    I thank you for your great effort in providing accurate, useful and wonderful information on your esteemed channel. A thousand greetings of respect, appreciation and pride. I wish you success and progress in your wonderful work. Much respect

  • @nickjung7394
    @nickjung7394 Рік тому +7

    Stalin, of course, outmaneuvered Roosevelt completely! As Brooke pointed out in his diary, Stalin was the only leader that never lost his political and strategic direction

    • @davidfoster5906
      @davidfoster5906 Рік тому

      How so? America dropped isolationism after pearl harbor. He then deregulated industry ,allowing us to become a industrial power house. Before 1941 we had less fighter planes than Britton . . We then fought a 2 front war from across the Pacific to across the Atlantic. If Stalin outmaneuvered Roosevelt then post war America has Stalin to thank for turning America to a capitalist democracy .

  • @fk3095
    @fk3095 Рік тому +5

    Who could ever forget that time the royal air force beat off the luftwaffe 13:40

  • @logicaredux5205
    @logicaredux5205 Рік тому +19

    Finally, a series that has rid itself of the starry-eyed nonsense of “The Special Relationship.”

    • @beowulf1312
      @beowulf1312 Рік тому

      Yes. That legend is false. Something Churchill invented to keep up British morale.

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Рік тому +3

      Do you have any information on “The Special Relationship.” ?

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Рік тому +1

      World War one 1914 to 1918, America entered.1917
      World War Two 1939 to 1945 America entered 1942. When Germany declared war on the USA. That tells you a lot.

    • @logicaredux5205
      @logicaredux5205 Рік тому +2

      @@iriscollins7583 Yes! America was smart. I still wish we had managed to totally stay out of the first one.

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Рік тому +1

      ​@@iriscollins7583That tells you nothing more than America entered the war. It is naive not to ask 'Qui bono?'. What was in it for America? Especially as War is always an extension of economic and geopolitical policy. And when you look deeper into the international economic and geopolitical of the time, you will see more clues why America went to war in World War I and World War II. And how it reflects the adage that "Geopolitics is like a poker game, where everyone is lying." And half the game is working out who is lying, about what, and when.

  • @i.charles8658
    @i.charles8658 Рік тому +9

    You must not underestimate the loyalty between both, especially their openness. Roosevelt bumped into a stark naked Churchill, leaving the bathroom "The Prime Minister of Great Britain has nothing to hide from the President of the United States"

  • @roberttelarket4934
    @roberttelarket4934 Рік тому +16

    The only thing Roosevelt assured giving Churchill plenty of in terms of supplies was liquor!!!

  • @tjw4947
    @tjw4947 Рік тому +10

    Machiavelli would find himself in quite a contest with our Franklin. What a conniving s.o.b. he was.

    • @jryecart8017
      @jryecart8017 5 місяців тому

      FDR blocked all 18 Black Olympians from the whitehouse celebration after 1936 Berlin games - - one of the 18 was 4X GOLD MEDALIST, JESSE OWENS

  • @Balthorium
    @Balthorium Рік тому +31

    Giving weapons to the USSR and calling it the “Arsenal of Democracy”was a sick joke.

    • @timothyayers8596
      @timothyayers8596 6 місяців тому

      Not really. If it were not for the USSR and the 11 million deaths they incurred Germany might have been way too much to deal with for both. Theres no question that Germany would have eventually been defeated but without Russia the US and Great Britain would have suffered massive amounts of death and destruction.

    • @jryecart8017
      @jryecart8017 5 місяців тому

      FDR supported the KLAN by appointing Klansman HUGO BLACK as SCOTUS

  • @PalofGrrr
    @PalofGrrr Рік тому +4

    Churchill knew that Germany if they conquered Europe would be able to conquer England, He would do any thing to save England

  • @labla8940
    @labla8940 Рік тому +1

    34:55 before he sailed Churchill confided to Queen Elizabeth In 1941??

    • @pjaybasmaignee
      @pjaybasmaignee 10 місяців тому

      The queen mother Elizabeth, or queen consort at the time.

  • @bhattkris
    @bhattkris Рік тому +8

    It ignores the role the sister-in-law of Churchill had in the war, which was as important as the Pearl Harbour attack.

    • @MarkAJohnsonEDLDFall
      @MarkAJohnsonEDLDFall Рік тому +3

      What did Churchill's sister-in-law do?

    • @bhattkris
      @bhattkris Рік тому +1

      Read Liberty or death by Patrick French.

    • @patrickelliott-brennan8960
      @patrickelliott-brennan8960 Рік тому +1

      @@bhattkris Why not just summarise it? The person asked a quite straightforward question.
      Did she make tea the wrong way?

  • @charlielauffer7644
    @charlielauffer7644 5 місяців тому

    I highly recommend this, which shows one the real world of politics in history and the ruthless intelligence that is required to play on the world stage. Only 50 minutes, very quick in depth study.

  • @Chris-lh7wj
    @Chris-lh7wj Рік тому +33

    With the Nazis on their doorsteps and daily bombing raids by the Luftwaffe, I can’t help but to be in awe of the astounding resolve that was shown by Churchill, the RAF, and the general British population. I do wonder,as American, if most Brits today realize what their grandparents or great grandparents had to endure.

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 Рік тому +6

      Both my Grandfather's went through 2 WW fought in WW1. One crippled but the other an Air Raid Warden in WW2 in the Blitz

    • @richardsymonds5159
      @richardsymonds5159 Рік тому +6

      My generation does being post war babies but I am not sure the next and subsequent generations do probably because the memories are not part of their lives like it was part of ours - different times and a lack of education in terms of history is the culprit - not politically correct to discuss it at school today they would far rather discuss the 150 genders!!

    • @Don-mu2qh
      @Don-mu2qh Рік тому +3

      A lot of British people realize that Churchill's war cost the British their empire and their standing as world leader.

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 Рік тому +2

      @@Don-mu2qhThey realise because they know how to spell their language.

    • @iriscollins7583
      @iriscollins7583 Рік тому

      ​@@Don-mu2qhNow we have the Commonwealth

  • @carolecarr5210
    @carolecarr5210 Рік тому +13

    Churchill was too "demanded" ! He was a snob, but yet exactly what ,Britain need at that point in history.

    • @coloniser.-
      @coloniser.- Рік тому +1

      not really. a peace deal by lord halifax would most likely secured a future of a better Europe

    • @dominiclane8538
      @dominiclane8538 Рік тому

      ​@@coloniser.-pfffft lmao what planet you from

    • @coloniser.-
      @coloniser.- Рік тому

      @@dominiclane8538 agartha

  • @kenlodge3399
    @kenlodge3399 Рік тому +14

    I'll tell you what. Have read and reviewed and seen every documentary about FDR and Churchill and I can say this about their relationship: FDR felt sorry for Churchill. In fact am sure over time it certainly became empathic, but there are parts of every relationship where it's often better Not to know what the other person is going thru. In fact I'll go as far as to share, at some point FDR knew he was fatally ill and that added to his sympathy for a man like Churchill. Most men who've climbed all the many peaks and ridden the avalanches down in the due course of things, FDR welcomed death. In too many ways and in spite of his wealth, the weight of the benefactor to the world, the leader of the free world just overcoming the greatest conflagration in the history of Man, FDR welcomed an end of it. And knowing his comrade was of similar stock, he did not envy him any.

    • @joelspringman523
      @joelspringman523 Рік тому

      I don't think FDR had much of a conscience.
      He was a communist and a great admirer of Stalin.

    • @johnbrattan9341
      @johnbrattan9341 Рік тому +1

      kenlodge. Really?

  • @Davidfooterman
    @Davidfooterman Рік тому +4

    It seems that the American people were more inclined to actively support Britain than Roosevelt himself, who might have been quite a danger to British interests in 1941.

  • @MWM-dj6dn
    @MWM-dj6dn Рік тому +12

    A wonderful channel that deserves all respect, appreciation and pride. Accurate and useful information in a sophisticated and beautiful manner. I wish you lasting success. I have the utmost respect and admiration for your great honor for these wonderful works. I hope you success

  • @nigellawson8610
    @nigellawson8610 Рік тому +26

    I like the nickname Gen. Vinegar Joe Stilwell give Roosevelt. He referred to him as "Old Rubber Legs," which really sums up his character!

    • @Johnnycdrums
      @Johnnycdrums Рік тому +4

      Well, I think FDR in a better light, now.

    • @n1mogator
      @n1mogator Рік тому

      FDR saved the world from tearny!!! the doc is ify!!!

  • @KOMET2006
    @KOMET2006 5 місяців тому +6

    Speaking as an American with a lifelong fascination with history, I regard Franklin D. Roosevelt as one of the BEST Presidents the U.S. has ever had.
    Winston Churchill's chief virtue came from being made Prime Minister at a very critical moment in British history in which through the power of his oratory, he inspired Britain to continue the fight against the Third Reich - despite seemingly insurmountable odds - from May 1940 to December 1941 (when the U.S. entered the war).
    Yet, Churchill remained an unrepentant imperialist, determined to retain the British Empire. "His Majesty did not appoint me Chief Minister to preside over the liquidation of the British Empire."

    • @tjanderson5892
      @tjanderson5892 5 місяців тому

      What’s funny is residing over the liquidation of the British Empire is exactly what Churchill did. Except his warmongering and superiority complex accelerated that liquidation by being willing to sell off the entire Empire in order to defeat Germany. Germany who never wanted war w/ Britain in the first place lol.
      Wonder if Churchill ever reflected on how much of the Empire would’ve been saved if Chamberlain had remained prime minister lol. Churchill lost the Empire for a war that he doesn’t even get credit for winning. That goes to the USSR and the US

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 4 місяці тому

      correct the inbreeding imperialists tried to to keel haul the Americans - twice so the fauntleroys had no big say in what we were to do

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 4 місяці тому

      @@KOMET2006 what country in the Continent are you from. I suspect the United States of buy nit it!

    • @frereM
      @frereM 4 місяці тому +1

      Churchill received the greatest stroke of luck in regard to his halo-adorned legacy when Roosevelt died, thereby leaving him to paint himself as the great hero without fear of authoritative contradiction, an occupation that he very candidly stated that he would fulfill.

    • @christophercook723
      @christophercook723 4 місяці тому

      @@KOMET2006 You are obviously from the United States of that Continent. All the other Countries in Anerica know the name of their Country.

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 8 місяців тому +1

    Roosevelt had always known that war with both Germany and Japan was inevitable. During the 1930s, he built up U.S. infrastructure, with dam projects, roads and forest products, and resource development. He established military bases, including naval, army, and airbases using the CCC and WPA, in conjunction with the TVA. Without Roosevelt's foresight, the U.S. response would have been far too slow and small. As it turned out, the U.S. was able to leap with both feet into immediate wartime production.

  • @Paakun80914
    @Paakun80914 Рік тому +8

    Only natural that Allies disagree. More so with heads of states of democracies.

  • @loladavinci1243
    @loladavinci1243 Рік тому +2

    Your promo code does not work ...

  • @terry4137
    @terry4137 Рік тому +18

    I’m American however I respected Churchill more then I did Roosevelt!

    • @edwardng1496
      @edwardng1496 8 місяців тому +2

      I respected both persons! I am thankful for leading the countries out of depression and winning the war!

    • @SusannePust-q7v
      @SusannePust-q7v 5 місяців тому

      They both were evil men.

    • @jryecart8017
      @jryecart8017 5 місяців тому +1

      @sus - - more CRT hatred of the "whyte" man ? .... ride ride rif the DEI NO FACTS exprrss

    • @dannytalley5559
      @dannytalley5559 5 місяців тому +1

      How can you say that about the best president we ever had

    • @dr.barrycohn5461
      @dr.barrycohn5461 4 місяці тому

      I doubt you have read and a real knowledge base on FDR.

  • @RileyRampant
    @RileyRampant Рік тому +41

    Fantastic inside history. When we consider that the pre-war US had a basic tradition of anti-colonialism (with a few exceptions), it is inevitable that US and British interests were hardly unified in every respect - the US wasn't about to expend treasure, much less blood, safeguarding British Holdings around the world.

    • @pauljd86
      @pauljd86 Рік тому +3

      Politics aside wow history is amazing.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому

      Absolutely *"the US wasn't about to expend treasure, much less blood, safeguarding British Holdings around the world."* That's exactly what the toffey nosed aristocrats on their estate's playing Polo wanted to do. The Commoners were fine though

    • @allansmith3837
      @allansmith3837 Рік тому

      No the American plan was to replace the British Empire with their own.

    • @Roz-y2d
      @Roz-y2d Рік тому

      What a stupid statement. The has nothing directly to do with empire. Roosevelt wasn’t looking at the bigger picture, and he told outright lies. His own people were against him and eventually he had a mental breakdown. Roosevelt made some dubious decisions, and after the war his mental and physical condition was finally revealed. Then, Eleanor R got the blame. Apparently, she had been running the country all along. What a s..tshow.

    • @mumfernandez729
      @mumfernandez729 Рік тому +1

      😊

  • @johnwright291
    @johnwright291 Рік тому +11

    Excellent. Bravo!!

  • @glps6167
    @glps6167 Рік тому +2

    1941, Churchill invited to visit the U.S. for a personal meeting with the president. Narrative: "Before he sailed, Churchill had confided to Queen Elizabeth ..". She became queen in 1952; the narrator meant her father George VI.

    • @patrickhopton4297
      @patrickhopton4297 Рік тому +2

      He means King George’s wife . . . .Elizabeth.

    • @philpryor7524
      @philpryor7524 10 місяців тому

      You simple fool. George VI had a wife, a Queen, Elizabeth.

  • @micksherman7709
    @micksherman7709 Рік тому +10

    As I kid I was taught and I read that FDR and Churchill were best buds. I was shocked when I realised the truth.

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Рік тому

      Hitler’s declaration of war against the United States is the most powerful testimony to his egomania: how could he have been so dumb; or is this an unfair, teleological assessment from a position of knowledgeable retrospect?

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +1

      Roosevelt's administration had up to 2,000 employees actually working as agents for the USSR. His administration protected them. The US military broke the code for the cables between the Soviet delegation in the US and Moscow, and when Roosevelt's wife Eleanore was informed of this, she notified the Soviets. She betrayed her own country for the communist regime. Roosevelt had as his most important aid a man named Harry Hopkins, who actually lived with the Roosevelts in the White House. He was named as one of the Soviet's most important agents after the fall of the USSR by a former Soviet spy chief. ....
      Roosevelt brought a dramatic increase in central control to the US domestically. One of the originators of fascism, Mussolini, referred to Roosevelt as a fellow fascist. Roosevelt broke the tradition of running for only 2 terms as president, and ran 4 times even though he was very ill. He threatened to pack the supreme court with his yes men in order to push through his authoritarian fascist system, which actually prolonged significantly the Great Depression according to modern academic research.....He was obviously a destructive force.

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Рік тому

      @@johnl5316 The mixture of revulsion and disbelief at the behavior of Mrs. Roosevelt [forget the ‘Eleanor’ bit that gets this unelected pseudo-President a more elevated profile of her own than is appropriate in her particular case] suggests that, despite everything we might not like, our modernity, more specifically in its media-related elements, has come a long way forward in a positive direction from those awful days when all kinds of patrician arrogance among the so-called elites of ‘the Allies’ blighted this country and its politics. We got through WWII despite, not because of them, and their efforts. This negative generalization is entitled, if not obliged, to be considered because of the misinformed, hero-worshipping generalizations that are made in favor of those that managed that war. I had some spirited ‘discussions’ with my parents and relatives on this subject. Once they got over the ‘how dare you?!’ nonsense, one or two, notably, I’m proud to say, my father came round to my (generation’s) way of thinking. In fact, my father became quite unimpressed with Tom Brokaw and his pompous, simpering approach to war heroes, especially when he interviewed ‘leaders’ who were just politicians with the gift-of-the-gab who had no idea what the end of a gun barrel looked like from head-on. I have distrusted every British and American politician involved in any kind of war anywhere, ever since.

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Рік тому +1

      Over the years, I have come to believe that Churchill, the patrician, was able to think like and empathize with the common man, although it didn’t look like it. However, FDR had no such insight; but then, Churchill was a writing historian, a self-aware literary mind, and a man with understanding and empathy for the common man (even though it and he might not appear that way) despite his privileged upbringing. FDR was a thinker and a strategist of his time and place, and one of great stature, but I question whether he had that deeper and more emotionally colored insight that stems from a literary and historical immersion of the type Churchill had despite his privileged upbringing. I’m speculating; I’m being opinionated; and I may be totally incorrect; but I need the benefit of a dialectic critique of what I’m suggesting. Did Churchill, the historian-type, have more insight than FDR? It’s a very provocative question, especially to those familiar with FDR’s role in the New Deal, the National Recovery Administration, and the ending of Prohibition.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому

      @@Davidfooterman see comments by john5316

  • @user-od1yi5iq1k
    @user-od1yi5iq1k Рік тому +1

    13:30 What is this music called?

  • @johncrossphd342
    @johncrossphd342 Рік тому +14

    An interesting but ultimately absurd argument that Roosevelt tried to stay out of the war and cynically use the war to weaken the British Empire. First, there was no reason at the time for the US to join the war against Germany. Roosevelt was clearly anglophilic, however he had to avoid any appearance of wanting war. Like wilson in 1916, he had to run as an anti-war candidate in 1940, and couldnt just turn around and advocate war. Add to that the fact that Roosevelt readily went on with the concept of the "Europe First" strategy even though that made absolutely no sense to US interests, was extremely unpopular, and would be the last ting he would do if he really wanted to undermone British interests. And, BTW, there was no "Queen Elizabeth" in 1940 or 1941, or indeed at any time during the war. A huge gaff.

    • @BigHenFor
      @BigHenFor Рік тому +1

      Other than the Queen Elizabeth gaffe, you haven't really made your argument. If anything, the facts after the war proved that whatever Roosevelt's sentiments were, those of them that followed him, certainly extracted both economic and military concessions that weakened the British Empire after the war.

    • @pedanticradiator1491
      @pedanticradiator1491 Рік тому +5

      ​@@BigHenFor they may have meant King George VI'S wife who was called Queen Elizabeth

    • @sedekiman
      @sedekiman Рік тому

      @@pedanticradiator1491 Yes, documentary not that stupid. King George V1, and Queen Elizabeth. And while I am here, the US so the bastion of Freedom wanted to stay out of the conflict that was going to overrun Europe. Doing nothing for democracy.

    • @glorgau
      @glorgau Рік тому

      Europe first was entirely in US interests. Firstly, Germany could not be allowed to solidify its hold on Europe, it was always a far greater threat than Japan. Secondly, the US and Britain did not know how far along the Germans were with the atomic bomb.

    • @johncollins7062
      @johncollins7062 Рік тому

      @@glorgau Exactly correct! The only reason Japan attacked Pearl Harbor was because it was already crippled by a U.S. led embargo.

  • @woody844
    @woody844 Рік тому +4

    I’m hoping that Churchill knew as much about Stalin.

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Рік тому +1

      He certainly did, it was his underlying fear the entire second half of the war. He knew what would be the fate of the eastern European nations but there was little He could do about it short of going to war with the Russians.

  • @patriciapalmer4215
    @patriciapalmer4215 Рік тому +18

    Roosevelt's effete urbanity had to drive Churchill mad.

    • @parkersmith7611
      @parkersmith7611 Рік тому +1

      Hello Patricia how are you doing today?....Yes you are correct Roosevelt's effete had to drive Churchill mad...i hope you are enjoying the show?

    • @patriciapalmer4215
      @patriciapalmer4215 Рік тому +2

      @@parkersmith7611 An absolute delight. I love well conceived and executed content. Thank you for inquiring. I hope you are doing well and have a Happy Easter !

    • @parkersmith7611
      @parkersmith7611 Рік тому +1

      @@patriciapalmer4215 Yes i'm fine thanks for asking...where are you texting from?

  • @kahhowong3417
    @kahhowong3417 Рік тому +2

    Churchill betrayed Stalin with the promise of the Second Front at the on-start of WW2, but at the end of the war Roosevelt betrayed Churchill in subsuming the British Empire; and the Queens’ British commonwealth was too little too late for the Common class, so Churchill failed the British Ruling Aristocracy Class.

  • @Dr.God-666
    @Dr.God-666 Рік тому +93

    Ahh, the 1940s... When world leaders had an IQ above that of a goldfish.

    • @johncarroll772
      @johncarroll772 Рік тому +10

      Or a potato 🥔

    • @MomMom4Cubs
      @MomMom4Cubs Рік тому

      Well, without social media and 24 hour news, it was much easier to be stupid and get away with it. Provided, of course, those working for you have more intellect than a goldfish or a potato.

    • @wo4091
      @wo4091 Рік тому

      Roosevelt didn't. He helped subject the people of East Europe to 44 years of tyranny

    • @theknifedude1881
      @theknifedude1881 Рік тому +6

      Comparing them to politicians makes the fish look bad.

    • @yoyyoy6376
      @yoyyoy6376 Рік тому

      Sorry but these guys made the same mistakes leaders make today if not more, do glorify these dead men

  • @user-od1yi5iq1k
    @user-od1yi5iq1k Рік тому

    What is the background music called?

  • @carltornell
    @carltornell Рік тому +4

    And he hardly confided anything to the Queen Elizabeth as she was largely ten years away from the throne.

    • @Jolluna
      @Jolluna Рік тому +2

      He would have had occasions to confide in her since she stayed in London with her husband King George VI. Then-princess Elizabeth is who you're thinking of. It can be confusing.

    • @carltornell
      @carltornell Рік тому +1

      @@JollunaYou are sure right.

  • @billotto602
    @billotto602 8 місяців тому +2

    Thank God they were able to overcome their differences. For the sake of the free world.

  • @vickihatley4041
    @vickihatley4041 Рік тому +4

    Who really Needs regular T.V. if U have History
    A Must 4 People that still want 2 learn r just watch again 💙💠

  • @peterbrewster7028
    @peterbrewster7028 Рік тому +3

    Brilliant history of those relationships.

  • @elrond3737
    @elrond3737 10 місяців тому +6

    Roosevelt was so very bad on understanding Stalin.
    Churchill with all his faults was heart and soul of the Allies.

  • @StephenAKatz
    @StephenAKatz Рік тому

    I would be very interested to hear you apply the concepts that you use to understand German's hyper inflation, to the the period from 1944 when the Bretton Wood system was planned, to the present. I believe that you could shed great light on that period.

  • @paulsontag9233
    @paulsontag9233 Рік тому +4

    "Empires just don't bargain" said the beggar.

    • @nicholasconnolly2227
      @nicholasconnolly2227 Рік тому +4

      Republics do replied the ungrateful bugger.

    • @timothyayers8596
      @timothyayers8596 6 місяців тому

      @@nicholasconnolly2227 Consider GB was begging who the ungrateful one again ??

    • @bobbyb379
      @bobbyb379 3 місяці тому +1

      @@timothyayers8596 the “donations” (ie Lend Lease) made by the US during WW2 doubled the size of the US economy between ‘39 and ‘45 and took unemployment down from 14% to 1%. It was arms manufacture that built the modern US, not the New Deal. Whilst the UK might have been begging, the US wasn’t doing an act of charity by providing the arms begged for.

    • @timothyayers8596
      @timothyayers8596 2 місяці тому +1

      @@bobbyb379 I will agree with most of that. The US economy won that war but it wasn’t benevolence. In fact it seemed apparent the goal was to finish off the British Empire and leave the US top of the hegemonic heap.

  • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
    @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 8 місяців тому

    As I recall the history as it is laid out in the books on WW2 I own, the Lend Lease Act along with the food supply was vital to Britain and made the difference in 1941.

  • @Mark-yy2py
    @Mark-yy2py Рік тому +22

    FDR had such a naive view of Stalin. Glad Truman didn’t, but by then, eastern Europe’s fate was sealed.

    • @sharongelfand5065
      @sharongelfand5065 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Mark-yy2pyalso, I think FDR was fading fast by the time of his last joint conference. He gave Stalin the western buffer zone he'd been asking for.

    • @DisDanDat
      @DisDanDat 5 місяців тому

      What proof do you have of this? Zero.

    • @Mark-yy2py
      @Mark-yy2py 5 місяців тому

      @@DisDanDat read history. He wanted to please Stalin at the expense of losing all of Eastern Europe.

    • @DisDanDat
      @DisDanDat 5 місяців тому

      @@Mark-yy2py I have read history, have you? Apparently not.

    • @sharongelfand5065
      @sharongelfand5065 5 місяців тому

      @@Mark-yy2pyfor a time, FDR was playing up to Stalin at Churchill's expense. Churchill was very vexed about this.

  • @Martin-ql2bd
    @Martin-ql2bd Рік тому +16

    Even though I am an American I am ashamed at Roosevelts two faced words and actions. For Roosevelt to reneg on his promise
    to help England after France fell was embarrassing! Makes the USA a lier not to be trusted! Roosevelt had no real convictions. He is run by public opinion! I must sadly say that Roosevelt acts like a Coward and Opportunist by asking England for Favors when offering Aid to Same.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому

      Churchill gutted India in gold/silver and Rice causing famine

    • @jmo8525
      @jmo8525 Рік тому

      Roosevelt made clear from the beginning that he was anti-colonialism and that if the U.S. were to enter Europe's war, not our war, that we had our own interests and that dismantling colonial power structures was one of those interests. How could you say your fighting for freedom from fascism when Britain and France were oppressing foreign countries and their populations to gut their natural resources for their themselves? Why are you ashamed that we are not to do the bidding of a foreign country and their foreign opposing interests?
      You speak as if the U.S. exists to do the bidding of foreign countries and their foreign interests. FDR was not a coward. Asking England for favors??!! Uh, Churchill conspiring to drag our sovereign nation into a foreign war for the interests of the British Empire is hardly friendly nor is it the the duty of American citizens.
      If you're American, maybe start learning American history and thinking of American interests.

  • @Yoteyawezekana
    @Yoteyawezekana Рік тому +4

    Whoa. Now that was something worth listening to. So FDR was a politician thru n thru and never a hero at all. WWll is not what school taught us.

  • @simontaylor2319
    @simontaylor2319 Рік тому +1

    Winston appears as a boy when shaking hand with Roosevelr on board a ship; in fact he was 8 years older

  • @chriscolton6329
    @chriscolton6329 Рік тому +4

    They were all a bunch of back stabbing psychopaths, they were politicians. There's no friends in that game. It staggers me how naive people are with the likes of Churchill and FDR, still thinking they were heroes. Look what happened to Patton when he became too outspoken about the future Soviet threat at the end pf the war.

    • @samsungtap4183
      @samsungtap4183 Рік тому

      Absolute nonsense, true Patton was a embarrassment but could have been sent home with a stroke of a pen. The troble Patton had was he was a very average 3-star general that was out of the loop. Whilst plans were being drawn up for war with Soviets there was good ol George mouthing off to the media

  • @Outlier999
    @Outlier999 Рік тому +11

    As a combat veteran of four wars Churchill knew the horrors of combat far better than slacker Roosevelt.

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому +5

      Ya sure - Gallipoli getting others killed for his overlords selfish Imperial Pursuits

    • @jamesdownes3284
      @jamesdownes3284 Рік тому

      ​@@bigwoody4704🤫

  • @alfredpaquin3563
    @alfredpaquin3563 Рік тому +4

    Roosevelt described Churchill as "A real stinker."😂

    • @JACB006
      @JACB006 10 місяців тому

      Churchill had a better choice of words for Roosevelt.

  • @MomMom4Cubs
    @MomMom4Cubs Рік тому +2

    13:40
    Sorry! Someone had to.

  • @johnl5316
    @johnl5316 Рік тому +6

    Roosevelt's administration had up to 2,000 employees actually working as agents for the USSR. His administration protected them. The US military broke the code for the cables between the Soviet delegation in the US and Moscow, and when Roosevelt's wife Eleanore was informed of this, she notified the Soviets. She betrayed her own country for the communist regime. Roosevelt had as his most important aid a man named Harry Hopkins, who actually lived with the Roosevelts in the White House. He was named as one of the Soviet's most important agents after the fall of the USSR by a former Soviet spy chief. ....
    Roosevelt brought a dramatic increase in central control to the US domestically. One of the originators of fascism, Mussolini, referred to Roosevelt as a fellow fascist. Roosevelt broke the tradition of running for only 2 terms as president, and ran 4 times even though he was very ill. He threatened to pack the supreme court with his yes men in order to push through his authoritarian fascist system, which actually prolonged significantly the Great Depression according to modern academic research.....He was obviously a destructive force.

    • @Kurtlane
      @Kurtlane Рік тому +1

      Could you provide the sources regarding Eleanore informing the Soviets. Thanks.

    • @Tyronepeader
      @Tyronepeader Рік тому +1

      Wild lunatic-Right slurs and unfounded smears on the reputation of an exceptional war-time President and his administration. Shameful.😮

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +2

      @@Kurtlane I gave that book away, but I will look for it

  • @carltornell
    @carltornell Рік тому +1

    I think nobody ever wrote: Dear Churchill. Roosevelt either wrote: Dear Mr Churchill, or Dear Winston. Elementary, it would seem, but apparently not.

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Рік тому +2

      He did use “Dear Churchill” at least once…telegrams are reproduced in Churchill’s history of WW2.

  • @gordonmills7798
    @gordonmills7798 Рік тому +15

    It started with a forced friendship but ended in acrimony because of Roosevelt's hidden agendas that he kept secret from Churchill: Roosevelt was a fairweather friend at best and very sneaky with it:: Churchill, on the other hand, made light of his many mistakes which cost many lives: They often walked the same path moving in different directions. Roosevelt to his shame tried to trade Churchill for Stalin which was a huge mistake::

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Рік тому +4

      Wow! I’ve often wondered about the real FDR, specifically with respect to his American patrician upbringing (as distinct from the equivalent roots in Britain). Was he a fair-weather friend both politically AND personally; would you, shall we say, want to go to a family get-together for Sunday lunch with FDR and family?

    • @Davidfooterman
      @Davidfooterman Рік тому

      Would you be comfortable with your kindergartners dropping food off their plates onto the table in his presence?

    • @gordonmills7798
      @gordonmills7798 Рік тому +1

      @@Davidfooterman FDRs wife could not stand Churchill so it would be more likely she would carve up Churchill instead of the turkey if he went to dinner.

    • @gordonmills7798
      @gordonmills7798 Рік тому

      @@Davidfooterman It is more likely FDR's wife would have dropped Churchill from the table such was her dislike for him:

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Рік тому +3

      IRONICALLY, after the war ended, India WAS freed, and thus began a series of demolition, of the British Empire. BUT--this annoyed the Americans , because many of those former colonies were turning Communist. As Churchill said , America must now, take over our Roll as Policeman of the world. Britain was Crushed by the War, and couldn't afford to play that role any more. Another Irony is, in carrying out that role, the US gradually occupied more and more places as Military bases, around the world, like it's own Colonies.

  • @frankteunissen6118
    @frankteunissen6118 Рік тому

    Churchill was NOT First Lord of the Admiralty in 1918. He had forcibly resigned from that post in 1915 after the Gallipoli disaster for which he was blamed. He was a member of the government in 1918, but as Minister for Munitions, a junior post in which it was unlikely to have direct interaction with the US Secretary of the Navy that was FDR.

    • @asmodeus0454
      @asmodeus0454 Рік тому

      Quite right.

    • @seandouglas5429
      @seandouglas5429 Рік тому

      I thought he served in the trenches as an officer after resigning from the admiralty?

  • @bobjackson4720
    @bobjackson4720 Рік тому +4

    America had it's colonies e.g. the Philippines, so it wasn't against colonialism, only someone else's colonialism. As the colonial master of the Philippines at times they had shown a high level of savagery, when dealing with decent.

    • @saviorvx1883
      @saviorvx1883 Рік тому

      yet despite what you call it , they still let them be self-governed without anyone forcin them to do so, just look at current news with the phillipeans , to call us despite the previous mistakes done to them. that there says a lot , to still have the heart of the ppl many years later. and im still shocked the vietnamanese ppl love the usa despite being bombed and being oranged ....theres a difference ,and your confusing circumstances of war that drove to tempoarry occupation to coloniasm. i say a good 90% is true and puerto rico/hawaii was taken to cover up that flank during the cold war. just look at china agression trying to push in those territories /to eeven go as far to build islands ...like wtf yu can do that? but it was nt greed that was the motivatior but fear it being used as a lsunchpad is the main reason why they done so.... besidees they had nukes when no one did, if they wanted to they couldve easily done some shix that every other dictator can dream of...yet they didnt .just tells you we arent about that, we just wanted to be left alone until the world problems started to have bombs comme our way. there was many good the us has done a lot of good and it balances out the wrong done by those few rats who drove us the wrong path.....but the ppl back home still havent changed i recently noticed ,the us will always be involved in every confliict because we are a mixed culture from all over the world , and our system accepts that culture to influence congress ,solong there will always be someone pushing to aid a side

    • @graceneilitz7661
      @graceneilitz7661 Рік тому

      By 1935 the Philippines had an autonomous government with a promised independence date in 1946.
      So, if nothing else Roosevelt somewhat practiced the anti colonialism that he preached.

    • @besbarax5112
      @besbarax5112 10 місяців тому

      Dissent

  • @dxdynamite47
    @dxdynamite47 8 місяців тому +3

    Every time a modern Yank declares that America singlehandedly won the war, show them this video and remind them who did all the work, and who was a lying backstabber.

  • @julianmarsh8384
    @julianmarsh8384 Рік тому +15

    The United States was hellbent on replacing England as a World Power. If one looks into the details, we treated the British government terribly during the war...Churchill whether he knew it or not, was merely the figurehead for this transferal of world power--someone we could claim we admired while we took over....the Soviet Union was a secondary consideration. We knew that no matter how many men in uniform they had or how much artillery or tanks, they had no reach beyond the lands immediately bordering them...

    • @Johnnycdrums
      @Johnnycdrums Рік тому +1

      The "Cambridge Five" were of the same mindset.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +2

      Roosevelt's administration had up to 2,000 employees actually working as agents for the USSR. His administration protected them. The US military broke the code for the cables between the Soviet delegation in the US and Moscow, and when Roosevelt's wife Eleanore was informed of this, she notified the Soviets. She betrayed her own country for the communist regime. Roosevelt had as his most important aid a man named Harry Hopkins, who actually lived with the Roosevelts in the White House. He was named as one of the Soviet's most important agents after the fall of the USSR by a former Soviet spy chief. ....
      Roosevelt brought a dramatic increase in central control to the US domestically. One of the originators of fascism, Mussolini, referred to Roosevelt as a fellow fascist. Roosevelt broke the tradition of running for only 2 terms as president, and ran 4 times even though he was very ill. He threatened to pack the supreme court with his yes men in order to push through his authoritarian fascist system, which actually prolonged significantly the Great Depression according to modern academic research.....He was obviously a destructive force.

    • @julianmarsh8384
      @julianmarsh8384 Рік тому +5

      @@johnl5316 Your take on this period of American history is the stuff of myth.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +1

      Check works that reference the Venona files. They are the transcripts of the decrypted Soviet cables. There are also many works discussing the archives of the Soviet spy net works that were revealed after the USSR broke up @@julianmarsh8384

    • @CAM8689
      @CAM8689 Рік тому

      oh well america first

  • @kevinmcosker9557
    @kevinmcosker9557 Рік тому +1

    I think the American flag before which FDR's image is superimposed appears to be that of the 50-state Republic and not of the 48 one, which he led through the War. (The giveaway here for flag-geeks is that the stars in the 50-star banner are arranged in off-set rows, while those of the 48-star flag are perfectly aligned). Just saying. However, please bear in mind that, as I'm a well-known idiot, I could be wrong here.

  • @saltyroe3179
    @saltyroe3179 Рік тому +10

    He problem for Roosevelt is that Britain was trying to maintain the biggest Empire in history with aid from an anti Empire USA. The UK was seen as a threat to US Sovereignty. There were many in the US who looked at the UK as an evil Empirical force and an existential threat. The UK, from who we separated seemed to have dreams of colonizing us again. As late as 1900 there was talk in the US of freeing Canada from the UK.
    The US was more sympathetic to the British Colonies that suffered under British rule. Churchill represented the old order of Empires that the USA opposed.
    Even in the 1950s the US was suspicious of the UK trying to keep its Empire. We could have helped the UK and France win the Suez crisis.
    Then there is the fact that Japan was a bigger threat to the US then Germany. This included much of the US population feeling we should focus on defeating Japan 1st and let the Soviets and Germans grind themselves down.

  • @simontaylor2319
    @simontaylor2319 Рік тому +2

    Roosevelt was certainly hoisted by his own petard

  • @photoisca7386
    @photoisca7386 Рік тому +4

    Churchill was obsessed with the Americans to the point he couldn't make objective observations. His "friend" FDR plotted against him because like so many Americans all he could think about was destroying the British Empire. The meeting in Tehran was a compromise location suggested by Stalin who thought he was being tested by Churchill and FDR. The original location was to be in either the Soviet Far East or the Aleutian Islands, chosen so that Churchill couldn't attend. In the event FDR stayed at the Soviet embassy, Tehran and the two were able to plot how they were going to carve up the post war world.

  • @MWM-dj6dn
    @MWM-dj6dn Рік тому +2

    ALL THE TIME YOU ARE THE BEST IN THE BEST

  • @thelorriesweeneyable
    @thelorriesweeneyable Рік тому +5

    How about between the 3. Stalin as well

  • @Conn30Mtenor
    @Conn30Mtenor Рік тому +3

    It's a shame that FDR died when he did- otherwise Vietnam wouldn't have happened. He had no love of empires.

  • @marisabenson1222
    @marisabenson1222 7 місяців тому

    So much has changed and yet here we are again in a very similar situation and though the roles of certain players may have changed we see the same dynamics being played out.

  • @danhicks684
    @danhicks684 Рік тому +7

    The most amazing thing is that Churchill dealt with the wrong Roosevelt. Theodore would have been better.

  • @robertmiller2173
    @robertmiller2173 Рік тому +2

    Roosevelt has a great deal to answer for! The Iron Curtain, PutiniZm, ComuniZm, etc

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +1

      Roosevelt's administration had up to 2,000 employees actually working as agents for the USSR. His administration protected them. The US military broke the code for the cables between the Soviet delegation in the US and Moscow, and when Roosevelt's wife Eleanore was informed of this, she notified the Soviets. She betrayed her own country for the communist regime. Roosevelt had as his most important aid a man named Harry Hopkins, who actually lived with the Roosevelts in the White House. He was named as one of the Soviet's most important agents after the fall of the USSR by a former Soviet spy chief. ....
      Roosevelt brought a dramatic increase in central control to the US domestically. One of the originators of fascism, Mussolini, referred to Roosevelt as a fellow fascist. Roosevelt broke the tradition of running for only 2 terms as president, and ran 4 times even though he was very ill. He threatened to pack the supreme court with his yes men in order to push through his authoritarian fascist system, which actually prolonged significantly the Great Depression according to modern academic research.....He was obviously a destructive force.

    • @robertmiller2173
      @robertmiller2173 Рік тому

      Thanks again John@@johnl5316

  • @palirvin1871
    @palirvin1871 Рік тому +5

    Roosevelt was a spoiled, rich, fancyboy who expected everyone to worship him. His purpose in life of his own glory.

    • @johnl5316
      @johnl5316 Рік тому +3

      Roosevelt's administration had up to 2,000 employees actually working as agents for the USSR. His administration protected them. The US military broke the code for the cables between the Soviet delegation in the US and Moscow, and when Roosevelt's wife Eleanore was informed of this, she notified the Soviets. She betrayed her own country for the communist regime. Roosevelt had as his most important aid a man named Harry Hopkins, who actually lived with the Roosevelts in the White House. He was named as one of the Soviet's most important agents after the fall of the USSR by a former Soviet spy chief. ....
      Roosevelt brought a dramatic increase in central control to the US domestically. One of the originators of fascism, Mussolini, referred to Roosevelt as a fellow fascist. Roosevelt broke the tradition of running for only 2 terms as president, and ran 4 times even though he was very ill. He threatened to pack the supreme court with his yes men in order to push through his authoritarian fascist system, which actually prolonged significantly the Great Depression according to modern academic research.....He was obviously a destructive force.

    • @palirvin1871
      @palirvin1871 Рік тому

      Interesting tings you shared. I historically despise the man and yet the American public worships his legacy. My country is so full of ignorant morons I could walk on their heads for a ten miles and never touch the ground if the gathered.@@johnl5316

    • @bigwoody4704
      @bigwoody4704 Рік тому +2

      @@johnl5316 sure how about some sources because we know the Soviets never tell a lie - though you are racking up an impressive resume'

  • @moo639
    @moo639 Рік тому

    Roosevelt's elusive behavior may have "raised the question" of what game he was playing, but it did not "beg the question." That phrase
    has a meaning that does not apply.

  • @Graywing
    @Graywing Рік тому +3

    Is this the new timeline channel?

  • @Dave-hc4jm
    @Dave-hc4jm 4 місяці тому +1

    Churchill wanted the USA to save his precious Empire by coming into the war. In the end, the USA entering the war cemented the end of the British Empire. Ironic. So much for the great Churchill.

  • @marcelcicort9671
    @marcelcicort9671 Рік тому +12

    The sad end is that Roosevelt was duped by Stalin and we all know the result of that...

  • @rolandrodriguez3854
    @rolandrodriguez3854 Рік тому

    Who needs the NFL when we have historical videos on You Tube.