THE 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL WORLD LEADERS OF ALL TIME

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7 The 100 Most Influential World Leaders of All Time 7

Yet it was in the Pacific rather than the Atlantic that
war came to the United States. The Japanese bombed Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii, on Dec. 7, 1941, destroying nearly the
entire U.S. Pacific fleet and hundreds of airplanes and kill-
ing about 2,500 military personnel and civilians. On
December 8, at Roosevelt’s request, Congress declared
war on Japan; on December 11 Germany and Italy declared
war on the United States.
From the start of American involvement in World War
II, Roosevelt took the lead in establishing a grand alliance
among all countries fighting the Axis powers. He, Joseph
Stalin, and Winston Churchill seemed to get along well
when they met at Tehrān in November 1943. The Big Three
met again at the Yalta Conference in the Crimea, U.S.S.R.,
in February 1945.

Declining Health and Death

Roosevelt had been suffering from advanced arterioscle-
rosis for more than a year before the Yalta Conference. His
political opponents had tried to make much of his obviously
declining health during the campaign of 1944, when he ran
for a fourth term against Governor Thomas E. Dewey of
New York. But Roosevelt campaigned actively and won the
election. By the time of his return from Yalta, however, he
was weak. On the afternoon of April 12, he suffered a mas-
sive cerebral hemorrhage, and he died a few hours later.

Eamon de Valera


(b. Oct. 14, 1882, New York, N.Y., U.S.—d. Aug. 29, 1975, Dublin, Ire.)

E


amon de Valera was a Irish politician and patriot
who served as prime minister of Ireland in the years
1932–48, 1951–54, and 1957–59, and president from 1959
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