Elusive Victories_ The American Presidency at War-Oxford University Press (2012)

(Axel Boer) #1
notes to pages 185‒193 399


  1. Villa, “U.S. Army, Unconditional Surrender, and Potsdam Proclamation,”
    75–77.

  2. Military opinion began to turn against the need for Soviet entry into
    the war against Japan after Yalta, with Admiral King advising Truman
    that the war could be won without Soviet help. Larrabee, Commander in
    Chief , 202.

  3. Villa, “U.S. Army, Unconditional Surrender, and Potsdam Proclamation,”
    90–91.

  4. Kimball, Juggler , 149, 152–53.

  5. Larrabee, Commander in Chief , 577–78.

  6. Lukas Haynes and Michael Ignatieff , “Mobilizing Public Support for
    the United Nations: A Case Study of State Department Leadership in
    Building Public and Congressional Support for a Leading U.S. Role in
    International Organization, 1944–1945,” Center for Public Leadership
    Working Papers , Harvard University, 2003.

  7. Th is is the term Kimball prefers. Kimball, Juggler , 93–94.

  8. Haynes and Ignatieff , “Mobilizing Public Support for the United
    Nations.”

  9. Haynes and Ignatieff , “Mobilizing Public Support for the United
    Nations,” 71.

  10. Kennedy, Freedom from Fear , 854–55.

  11. Roberts, Masters and Commanders , 346–47.

  12. Eliot A. Cohen, Supreme Command: Soldiers, Statesmen, and Leadership in
    Wartime (New York: Anchor Books/Random House, 2002) , chap. 4.

  13. Roberts, Masters and Commanders , 411.

  14. Larrabee, Commander in Chief , 635–36. For a full discussion of Churchill’s
    responsibility for postwar British decline, see Peter Clarke, Th e Last Th ou-
    sand Days of the British Empire: Churchill, Roosevelt, and the Birth of Pax
    Americana (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2008).

  15. Larrabee, Commander in Chief , 495–96.

  16. Roberts, Masters and Commanders , 565–66. Churchill later claimed that
    had the Anglo-Americans advanced into the future Soviet zone and
    refused to withdraw according to the agreement, Stalin would have been
    forced to renegotiate the zone boundary. But the Soviets would have
    had no incentive to do so, particularly since the United States and Great
    Britain still wanted the Red Army to join the war against Japan. Larrabee,
    Commander in Chief , 496.

  17. Larrabee, Commander in Chief , 3.

  18. Roberts, Masters and Commanders , 410–11.

  19. Importantly, too, Churchill and Roosevelt exercised diff erent authority
    over their respective militaries. Th e president could issue an order and
    expect it to be obeyed, but the prime minister did not hold a position in
    the formal military chain of command. So he resorted to browbeating his
    military commanders. See Larrabee, Commander in Chief , 14–15.

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