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WW2: The Resource War - Lend-Lease - Extra History - #2 - YouTube
Channel: Extra Credits
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[Theme Music]
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The year is 1941.
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World War II is entering its third year, France has collapsed, and Great Britain is barely holding on.
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A last bulwark of democracy against the tide of fascism.
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Dictatorship rules Europe, and the sleeping giant of the United States has yet to wake.
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With the collapse of France in 1940, the situation in Europe becomes clear.
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Without resources from the U.S, all resistance to the Nazi military machine would collapse.
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No matter how bravely the small island nation of Britain tried to hold out.
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But America was opposed to war. In fact it goes further.
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America was opposed to any intervention at all.
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In the 1930s, the U.S had passed the Neutrality Act.
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Which not only established that it wasn't going to get involved with foreign wars,
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But went further, with the prevailing American isolationism of the time,
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and declared that America wasn't going to sell arms to nations at war.
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President Roosevelt saw the threat that Nazi Germany posed,
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and desperately wanted to find ways to support the British war effort.
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But the Neutrality Act kept his hands tied.
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When Czechoslovakia fell, he lobbied Congress to renew an old prevision in the Neutrality Act,
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called Cash and Carry.
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But, his efforts were rebuffed.
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Then, Poland fell.
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And things started to look grim.
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Finally, on November 5th, 1939, Cash and Carry was renewed.
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But, Cash and Carry was a limited provision.
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It allowed for the sale of material to Britain and France, but only if they paid in cash for the material,
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and transported it all back to Europe themselves.
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No U.S ship was to enter a war zone.
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At first, this worked. But as the years dragged on, and France fell,
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Britain found itself hemorrhaging its reserves.
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The Battle of Britain, and the campaigning in North Africa had been bleeding it dry.
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There simply was no more cash in the U.K.
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And even the British Fleet was being stretched thin.
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In 1940, Roosevelt established a policy allowing the trade of destroyers to the British,
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in exchange for bases in British colonies.
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This policy was definitely pushing the limits of the Neutrality Act,
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But, technically, it wasn't violating the terms of Cash and Carry.
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Because the British were trading for the ships rather than buying them,
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and, hey, ships do a pretty good job of transporting themselves.
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So... there ya go.
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This deal really shows the desperation of the situation though.
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Roosevelt risked a potentially illegal action, because everyone:
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His staff, and even much of the British staff, saw the capitulation of the British Empire as inevitable.
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In 1940, everyone thought Britain was on the ropes,
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mere weeks from being taken down.
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And so, as a last "Hail Mary", this destroyers-for-bases deal put U.S bases on British colonies,
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so that they wouldn't simply fall into Nazi hands.
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But, fortunately, the Battle of Britain was won,
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And now, the U.S had to enter into more long term thinking.
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It was time for Lend-Lease.
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This is one of the critical turning points in the second World War.
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It's right up there with the German invasion of the Soviet Union,
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and the United States finally deciding to fully commit to war.
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Without Lend-Lease,
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the U.K almost certainly would have fallen.
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Fascists would gain control over all of Europe,
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and even if the U.S later decided to enter the war,
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they'd have no jumping-off point for a European Campaign.
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But, Lend-Lease, at last
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meant that the complete industrial power of the U.S
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would be committed to combating the Nazi War Machine.
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With Lend-Lease, the U.S had finally picked a side.
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Y'see, the idea behind Lend-Lease was simple.
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The U.S would give its strategic partners-
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And I say "strategic partners" because they're not Allies yet-
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massive amounts of war material for the duration of the war.
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After which, these "strategic partners" were supposed to give that material back.
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Funny thing about war material though,
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not a lot of it tends to come back in the same condition you lent it out in.
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And the U.S knew this.
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This was essentially the largest donation of war material in the history of mankind.
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And it wasn't just tanks and bombs.
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It was foodstuffs and telephone cabling.
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It was trucks and clothing.
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Heck, the U.S even shipped 2000 locomotives and 11,000 train cars
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over to the USSR to bolster their rail infrastructure.
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This was a huge portion of the U.S economy
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going to cover the material cost of the war.
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While other nations were carrying the bulk of the human cost.
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And the sheer size of this effort is indescribable.
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It helped to drag the U.S out of the Great Depression,
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and galvanized American production.
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It meant sending millions of tons overseas,
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shipping on a scale heretofore unimaginable during times of war.
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It meant giving away more goods
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than the entire world would have been able to produce annually
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a mere 75 years before.
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But, like all things,
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this decision wasn't as straightforward as we sometimes like to think of it.
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Looking back on it today,
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it's easy to see the results of this Herculean task
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and how fully America threw herself into the effort,
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and just assume that the entire nation was unified behind this cause.
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That it had broad support.
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But democracies are, by design, messy things,
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and even on the issue of Lend-Lease,
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voting in the U.S Congress was split almost exactly down party lines.
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But once the measure was passed,
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America really did embrace this decision
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to truly be the arsenal of democracy.
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To be the engine of war for the anti-fascist world.
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And that leads me to a particular group I'd like to talk about.
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A group who's too rarely remembered and celebrated.
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A group whose battles were rarely glorious.
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They never took cities or gained territory,
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but they're the group of Americans who risked their lives earliest.
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And sacrificed the most.
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They had higher casualty percentages than any of the other American Armed Services during the war.
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And they, very arguably, saved the free world.
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I would like to take this moment to acknowledge the service of the Merchant Marine.
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These are the men and women who serve as sailors to transport goods during wartime.
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They served in unarmed civilian ships,
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hauling necessary supplies to Allied Forces throughout the war.
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Sailing the Atlantic,
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everyday they faced the harrowing dread of the submarine.
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At any moment, they might lose their lives
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to an unseen and invisible vessel far below the waves.
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They served simply as prey.
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Unable to fight back against an enemy that might-
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at any time-
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strike without warning.
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To die asphyxiating in a steel tomb, or
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freezing in the unforgiving waters of the Atlantic,
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are horrors that no one would want to face.
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And yet, these sailors faced that everyday.
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Not for glory, but simply because it was a job that needed to be done.
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And these threats were so real and omnipresent,
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that the Merchant Marine became one of the first uses of statistical operations research.
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The frequency of attacks on the Merchant Marine
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presented enough data for decisions to be made about the optimal size of a convoy,
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And the escort it might require.
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Evidence all gathered off the backs of broken ships,
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and drowned sailors.
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But despite all of this,
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many of the men and women of the Merchant Marines
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signed up for voyage after voyage.
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Returning to the seas to make sure that the material of Lend-Lease
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always got through.
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And though the U.S wouldn't officially enter the war for nine more months,
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Lend-Lease made members of the Merchant Marines
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some of the first U.S citizens to give their lives
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for the Allied Cause in World War II.
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And in doing so,
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though their sacrifice is rarely celebrated,
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they helped change the course of history.
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Join us next week, as we look more closely at how
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the lack of specific natural resources drove Axis policy.
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And explore how many of the synthetic
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products we know today
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came to be during the second world war.
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[Ending Music]
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