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    Never Surrender

    Page 39
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      Eternal England, 179

      German Propaganda Ministry, 236, 308

      Nazi, 234

      Proust, Marcel, 36

      Prytz, Björn, 255, 304–5

      Raeder, Erich, 65, 307

      Raleigh, Sir Walter, 269

      Ramsay, Bertram, 212

      rearmament and rearmament debate, 9–10, 18, 19, 41–42, 83, 125, 207, 248

      Redman, Harold, 158

      Reinberger, Major Helmuth, 63–64

      Reynaud, Paul, 54, 79–81

      at Allied summit, June 11, 1940, 282–83, 285

      at Allied summit, June 13, 1940, 287–90

      at Allied summit, March 28, 1940, 87–88

      at Allied summit, May 16, 1940, 158–60

      at Allied Summit, May 31, 1940, and Churchill, 263–66

      appeal to United States for help, 237, 288, 290

      calls to Churchill as Germany invades, 153–54, 155, 156

      Chamberlain and, 87–88

      Churchill cable, May 30, 1940, 258–59

      Churchill meeting, May 26, 1940, 189, 197, 201–2

      Churchill pledges RAF squadrons to France, 160, 161–62

      complaints about the British, 258

      consequences of a Hitler victory, 279

      feud with Daladier, 89, 95–96

      as French premier, 82

      Gamelin crisis, 138–40

      German approach and, 156–57, 187, 279

      Halifax and, 203–4, 209, 224

      lover, Comtesse de Portes, 80–81, 87, 181, 287

      Mussolini neutrality pledge sought, 201–9, 238, 247, 248

      Paris apartment of, 161

      personality and character, 80–81

      Pétain and, 173

      Pétain replaces, 291

      separate peace called for, 287–88

      small stature of, 80, 87

      Spears and, 224–25, 237–38

      Spears representing Churchill, meeting, May 25, 1940, 180–83

      surrender of Belgian Army and, 237

      terms of armistice and, 301

      three-point war plan, 83

      weaknesses of, 225

      Reynolds, Robert, 71

      Ribbentrop, Joachim von, 40, 76

      Ritchie, Charles, 256, 257

      Roberts, Andrew, 130, 184

      Romania, 16

      Rome-Berlin Axis, 15

      Rommel, Irwin, 152

      Roosevelt, Franklin Delano

      advisors for, 165

      aid to Britain and, 298–99, 343n

      amending Neutrality Act and, 49–50

      appeals from, 25

      brief on Whitsun debate, 128

      British attack at Mers-el-Kébir and change of opinion about Britain, 303–4

      British pledge not to wage unrestricted air war, 117

      Churchill and, 165

      Churchill’s requests for aid, 155, 164–65, 205, 219–20

      French appeal to, 237, 288, 290

      joint French-British appeal to, 249, 250, 252, 262

      Mussolini rebuff, 209

      negotiated peace settlement and Mussolini, 222–23

      reply to Reynaud, June 14, 1940, 290–91

      secret approach to Canada, 220

      Sudetenland and, 21

      views on war (1939), 50

      war cabinet view of, 230

      Rothermere, Lord, 28, 113

      Rothschild family, 256

      Royal Air Force (RAF), 51

      ability to defend Britain, 198

      account of air battle, Adler Tag, 313–15

      Army Co-operation Command, 315

      Baldwin and building of fighter planes, 11–12

      British victory dependent on, 277

      Coastal Command, 315

      Dowding System, 310, 312–13

      Dunkirk and, 215, 245, 260, 261, 275–76, 278

      Fighter Command, 12, 240, 260, 310–11, 312–13, 316

      Fighter Command head, Dowding, 240, 278–79, 315, 316

      French campaign losses, 311

      Gardner’s eyewitness account of air battle, 307

      German attack, August 15, 1940, 316–19

      German invasion threat and, 310–11

      Hurricanes, 281, 282, 306, 311, 315, 317

      number of planes available for home defense, 154, 160, 240, 254

      patrols over Dunkirk, 240

      Spitfires, 311, 314, 315, 317, 318

      squadrons sent to defend France, 160–61

      strikes in Italy, 282

      Sudeten crisis and, 24

      Royal Navy, 18, 51, 277

      blockade of Germany, 39

      danger of Germany gaining control of, 220

      in the Dover Straits, 306–7

      Dunkirk and, 270, 272, 273

      Force H, 301

      Gallipoli and, 100

      German invasion of Norway and, 93–96

      German invasion threat and, 309–10

      German sinking of the Glowworm, 94–95

      German sinking of the troop ship Lancastria, 291

      Home Fleet, 309–10

      Home Fleet at Scapa Flow, Scotland, 93–94

      losses in German assault on Holland and Belgium, 154

      losses in Norwegian campaign, 154

      Narvik expedition, 98, 99, 100, 101–2

      need for United States ships, 154–55

      Operation Catapault and French Navy, 301–4

      put on alert, September 1938, 22

      strength of, 1940, 154, 251, 254, 278–79

      Sudeten crisis and, 24

      Royal Navy ships

      Glowworm, 94–95

      Hood, 301

      Keith, 270

      Kelly, 141

      Lancastria, 291

      Resolution, 301

      Queen of the Channel, 240

      Valiant, 301

      Vimy, 260

      Russia in World War I, 3. See also Soviet Union; Stalin, Josef

      Salisbury, Lord, 90, 109

      Chamberlain talk with, post–Norway invasion, 109

      as Churchill supporter, 142

      urging more vigorous pursuit of the war, 109, 110

      Seal, Eric, 304

      Serbia, 3, 16

      Shakespeare, William, 14, 309

      Shaw, George Bernard, 167

      Shirer, William, 24, 59, 195, 223, 236, 273

      at French surrender, Compiègne, 293–94

      in occupied Paris, 291–92

      Short Brothers aircraft works, 318

      Siegfried Line, 20–21, 63

      Simon, John, 37, 143

      Simpson, Wallis, 11, 130

      Sinclair, Archibald “Archie,” 112, 218, 247, 310

      Smith, F. E., 36

      Smith, Thomas and William, 105

      social movements, 1930s, 8

      “Soldier, The” (Brooke), 4

      Somerset, Nigel, 241, 241n

      Somerville, James, 301

      Somme, Battle of, 3–4

      first day casualties, 14

      South Africa

      isolationism of, 18

      Sudeten crisis and, 23

      Soviet Union

      assault on Finland, 57–58, 69–70

      casualties, Finland, 69–70

      German-Soviet pact, 27, 29, 42

      Hitler and, 27

      Hitler’s desire for an eastern empire and, 308

      occupation of Poland, 48

      treaty with the Czechs, 21

      See also Stalin, Josef

      Spain

      civil war (1936), 15, 16, 292

      Franco and, 16

      Spears, Edward Louis, 35, 51, 54, 55–56, 79, 110, 127, 197, 247

      Allied summit, June 11, 1940, 281, 282, 284

      Allied summit, June 13, 1940, 287–90

      Churchill cable, May 30, 1940, 257–59

      Churchill in France and, May 31, 1940, 262, 263, 266

      drowning rats fable, 182, 217

      final conversation with Pétain, 286–87

      memories of early June 1940, 279–80

      mission to see Reynaud, May 25, 1940, 180–83

      Pétain and, 279


      Pétain and armistice, 271

      Reynaud and, 180–83, 224–25, 237–38

      Reynaud-Daladier feud and, 89, 95–96

      wife of, 281–82

      Speer, Albert, 64

      Stalin, Josef, 21

      nonaggression pact signed with Hitler, 27, 29, 42

      perception of threats against the Soviet Union, 57–58

      Stanley, Oliver, 75, 86

      Star (London tabloid), 235

      Stark, Harold, 299

      Stokes, Richard, 167, 306

      Stokes Group, 306

      Strasbourg, France, evacuation, 58–59

      Sudetenland, 19, 22

      Chamberlain’s appeasement of Hitler and, 22–24

      See also Czechoslovakia

      Suez, 185, 203, 224, 238, 300

      Sunday Pictorial, 112, 113, 306

      Sweden, 72

      iron ore for Germany, 58

      neutrality of, 58

      Sylvester, A. J., 45, 46, 114

      Tavistock, Lord, 45

      Taylor, Myron, 108

      Tennyson, Alfred Lord, 241

      Testament to Youth (Brittain), 32

      Their Finest Hour (Churchill), 239

      Things to Come (film), 9, 9n, 24

      Thomas, Dorothy, 59

      Thomas, George, 65

      Thompson, Alfred Cuthbert, 192

      Thomsen, Hans, 299–300

      Thorndike, Sybil, 167

      Time magazine, 47–48

      Times of London, 60, 91

      lists of the dead and missing, 192

      reporter on Belgian frontier, 149

      sermon in, May 25, 1940, 180

      Tolleshunt D’Arcy, England, 21

      Toma, Wilhelm von, 185–86

      Tours, France, 286, 287

      Toynbee, Arnold, 192

      Treaty of Versailles, 74

      British guilt and, 19

      as cause of World War II, 77, 85

      Foch’s prediction for, 6–7

      German violations of, 13

      signing of, 6

      terms of, 6, 19

      Trondheim. See Norway

      Tunisia, 224

      Turkey, 107

      Turnbull, Patrick, 212, 226–27, 228–29

      Tyneside, England, 317

      United States

      aid sent to Britain, 298–99, 343n

      antiwar sentiment in (1939), 49

      British attack at Mers-el-Kébir and, 303

      British fleet wanted by, 270

      British National Prayer Day and, 196

      British war needs and, 155, 165, 205, 219–20

      defense of the Eastern Seaboard, 220

      as essential to Britain’s survival, 219

      German lobbying of Republican congressmen, 1940, 299–300

      isolationism of, 49, 71, 77, 300

      Kellogg-Briand Pact, 7

      Neutrality Acts, 49

      views on Britain’s progress, 312

      Welles’s European fact-finding trip (1940), 71, 72–77

      in World War I, 3, 71

      US Army Air Force, 220

      Venlo incident, 68

      Vigilantes, 14, 90, 92

      Villelume, Paul de, 151, 201

      “Vitaï Lampada,” 14

      Vuillemin, Joseph, 188, 189

      Walpole, Robert, 197

      war cabinet (of Churchill)

      debate between Halifax and Churchill, 197–99, 247–49, 259

      meeting of June 3, 1940, Dowding speaks, 278–79

      meeting of May 26, 1940, 196–99, 205–8

      meeting of May 27, 1940, 216–21, 229–32

      meeting of May 28, 1940, Halifax-Reynaud Italian plan, 247–49

      meeting of May 28, 1940, on Dunkirk, 239–41

      meeting of May 28, 1940, on fall of France, 246

      meeting of May 30, 1940, 261

      rejection of Reynaud’s French plan, 252

      Roosevelt discussed, 230

      “Wait and See” policy, 277

      War Office, 1, 52, 82, 95, 98, 99, 169, 170, 236, 261, 309

      Watching Committee, 14, 90, 109, 113, 142

      Waterhouse, Charles, 145

      Wedgewood, Joshua, 127

      Wehrmacht (unified armed forces of Germany), 66, 68

      Oberkommando (Supreme Command), 275

      offensive against Holland and Belgium, 151

      Welles, Sumner, 71–77, 165

      Churchill and, 75–76

      in London, 75–76

      meetings with Mussolini, 72–73, 76

      meeting with Hitler, 73–74

      in Paris, 74–75

      Wells, H. G., 9

      Westminster, Duke of, 28

      Weygand, Maxime, 173–75, 183, 225, 227, 238, 259, 263–66, 279–80, 283, 284, 285

      counsels armistice, 286, 287

      counsels quick end to war, 186–89

      Dunkirk and, 264–65

      home in Briare, 280, 282

      plan of, 174–75, 181, 253

      “White Cliffs of Dover, The,” (song), 60, 295

      Wilhelmina, Queen of Holland, 199

      Wilkie, Wendell, 300

      Wilson, Woodrow, 71

      Windsor, Edward Duke of, 59

      Winter War, 58

      Wood, Kingsley, 37, 117, 133, 134, 142

      as Chancellor of the Exchequer, 146

      Woodruff, Roy, 71

      World at War, The (BBC series), 52

      World Disarmament Conference, 7, 8

      World War I (the Great War)

      Allied dead, 2

      Armistice Day, 5

      Belgians in, 2–3

      British Cenotaphs, 4, 5, 22

      British death toll, 3–4, 9, 234

      British Expeditionary Force (BEF), 3, 4

      British forces in France, number of, 88

      British “surplus women,” 5, 114

      British “Unknown Soldier,” 5

      Czarist Russian dead, 3

      defensive lessons of, 52–53

      demise of empires and, 130–31

      Flanders, 4

      French dead and wounded, 3

      French in, 3

      Gallipoli, 4, 10–11, 36, 100

      German occupation of Belgium, 15

      German surrender, Forest of Compiègne, 293–94

      grands mutiles (grotesquely disfigured wounded), 5

      as the “Great Sacrifice,” 4, 5

      Italians in, 3

      Japanese in, 3

      Jutland, sea battle, 93

      Lloyd George’s memo, audit of cost of victory, 242

      Loos, 4

      Marne, 4

      Miracle on the Marne, 173

      Mons, 106

      offensive battles of 1914, casualties, 53

      Old Contemptibles (first British troops to fight), 105–6, 114

      onset of, 29

      Passchendaele, 4, 44

      reminders of, in 1938, 21–22

      Schlieffen plan, 149

      Serbians in, 3

      Somme, 3–4, 14, 44

      total casualties, 7

      United States, death toll and debt, 49

      United States and, 2, 71

      Verdun, 67, 188, 225–26, 263

      Victory Day Parade, London (1919), 1–4

      Vimy Ridge, 4, 44

      Ypres, 4, 15, 106, 215

      World War II

      Allied bombing campaign against Germany, 9n

      annoyances of, winter 1939–40, 59–60

      approach of (1939), 29

      Ardennes campaign (1940), 151–53

      Battle of Britain, 261, 307–10, 313–19, 321

      Battle of France, 171, 246, 283, 292

      begun as “limited war,” 41

      Belgium and Holland invaded, 128, 140–42, 149–54, 157–58, 197

      Belgium surrenders, 216, 217, 233–35, 237

      Britain’s strength, 1940, 154

      British analysts on, 1940, 112–13

      British deaths from German bombs, 9n

      British declaration of war on Germany, 40–41

      British determination to fight the war alone, 176, 207, 21
    4, 217, 276, 283, 287, 304

      British propaganda campaign, 41

      British rearmament, 9–10, 18, 19, 41–42, 83, 125, 207, 248

      Churchill war policy (never surrender), 128, 147, 165–66, 197–98, 205, 220–21, 220n, 229–30, 252, 276, 283, 287, 304

      Dunkirk as British victory, 276–77

      Finland, 57–58, 69–71, 72, 75, 81

      France-Britain no-separate-peace pledge, 87, 88, 187, 188, 288–90

      France enters war, September 3, 1939, 41, 54

      French surrender, June 18, 1940, 291, 293

      German invasion of Holland and Belgium, 128, 149–54

      German invasion of Norway, 93–96

      German offensive plan (Case Yellow), 64–68, 69, 149–50

      Maginot Line, 51, 52–53, 58, 59

      negotiated peace settlement policies, 31, 45–46, 54, 69, 72, 166–67, 183–85, 197, 221, 222, 244, 259, 296, 304–5, 326n (see also France; specific leaders)

      Operation Wilfred, 88

      “phony war,” 58, 61, 71

      “Reynaud plan,” 202–4

      size of military forces, 1939–40, 42–43, 51

      Western Front, 47, 51–52, 58–59, 81–82

      Yugoslavia, 16, 107

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