August 20, 1940
House of Commons
Almost a year has passed since the war began, and it is natural for us, I think,
to pause on our journey at this milestone and survey the dark, wide field. It is
also useful to compare the first year of this second war against German
aggression with its forerunner a quarter of a century ago. Although this war is
in fact only a continuation of the last, very great differences in its character
are apparent. In the last war millions of men fought by hurling enormous masses
of steel at one another. "Men and shells" was the cry, and prodigious slaughter
was the consequence. In this war nothing of this kind has yet appeared. It is a
conflict of strategy, of organization, of technical apparatus, of science,
mechanics and morale. The British casualties in the first 12 months of the Great
War amounted to 365,000. In this war, I am thankful to say, British killed,
wounded, prisoners and missing, including civilians, do not exceed 92,000, and
of these a large proportion are alive as prisoners of war. Looking more widely
around, one may say that throughout all Europe, for one man killed or wounded in
the first year perhaps five were killed or wounded in 1914-15.
The slaughter is only a small fraction, but the consequences to the belligerents
have been even more deadly. We have seen great countries with powerful armies
dashed out of coherent existence in a few weeks. We have seen the-French
Republic and the renowned French Army beaten into complete and total submission
with less than the casualties which they suffered in any one of half a dozen of
the battles of 1914-18. The entire body-it might almost seem at times the
soul-of France has succumbed to physical effects incomparably less terrible than
those which were sustained with fortitude and undaunted will power 25 years ago.
Although up to the present the loss of life has been mercifully diminished, the
decisions reached in the course of the struggle are even more profound upon the
fate of nations than anything that has ever happened since barbaric times. Moves
are made upon the scientific and strategic boards, advantages are gained by
mechanical means, as a result of which scores of millions of men become
incapable of further resistance, or judge themselves incapable of further
resistance, and a fearful game of chess proceeds from check to mate by which the
unhappy players seem to be inexorably bound.
There is another more obvious difference from 1914. The whole of the warring
nations are engaged, not only soldiers, but the entire population, men, women
and children. The fronts are everywhere. The trenches are dug in the towns and
streets. Every village is fortified. Every road is barred. The front line runs
through the factories. The workmen are soldiers with different weapons but the
same courage. These are great and distinctive changes from what many of us saw
in the struggle of a quarter of a century ago. There seems to be every reason to
believe that this new kind of war is well suited to the genius and the resources
of the British nation and the British Empire; and that, once we get properly
equipped and properly started, a war of this kind will be more favorable to us
than the somber mass slaughters of the Somme and Passchendaele. If it is a case
of the whole nation fighting and suffering together, that ought to suit us,
because we are the most united of all the nations, because we entered the war
upon the national will and with our eyes open, and because we have been nurtured
in freedom and individual responsibility and are the products, not of
totalitarian uniformity, but of tolerance and variety. If all these qualities
are turned, as they are being turned, to the arts of war, we may be able to show
the enemy quite a lot of things that they have not thought of yet. Since the
Germans drove the Jews out and lowered their technical standards, our science is
definitely ahead of theirs. Our geographical position, the command of the sea,
and the friendship of the United States enable us to draw resources from the
whole world and to manufacture weapons of war of every kind, but especially of
the superfine kinds, on a scale hitherto practiced only by Nazi Germany.
Hitler is now sprawled over Europe. Our offensive springs are being slowly
compressed, and we must resolutely and methodically prepare ourselves for the
campaigns of 1941 and 1942. Two or three years are not a long time, even in our
short, precarious lives. They are nothing in the history of the nation, and when
we are doing the finest thing in the world, and have the honor to be the sole
champion of the liberties of all Europe, we must not grudge these years or weary
as we toil and struggle through them. It does not follow that our energies in
future years will be exclusively confined to defending ourselves and our
possessions. Many opportunities may lie open to amphibious power, and we must be
ready to take advantage of them. One of the ways to bring this war to a speedy
end is to convince the enemy, not by words, but by deeds, that we have both the
will and the means, not only to go on indefinitely, but to strike heavy and
unexpected blows. The road to victory may not be so long as we expect. But we
have no right to count upon this. Be it long or short, rough or smooth, we mean
to reach our journey's end.
It is our intention to maintain and enforce a strict blockade, not only of
Germany, but of Italy, France, and all the other countries that have fallen into
the German power. I read in the papers that Herr Hitler has also proclaimed a
strict blockade of the British Islands. No one can complain of that. I remember
the Kaiser doing it in the last war. What indeed would be a matter of general
complaint would be if we were to prolong the agony of all Europe by allowing
food to come in to nourish the Nazis and aid their war effort, or to allow food
to go in to the subjugated peoples, which certainly would be pillaged off them
by their Nazi conquerors.
There have been many proposals, founded on the highest motives, that food should
be allowed to pass the blockade for the relief of these populations. I regret
that we must refuse these requests. The Nazis declare that they have created a
new unified economy in Europe. They have repeatedly stated that they possess
ample reserves of food and that they can feed their captive peoples. In a German
broadcast oL27th June it was said that while Mr. Hoover's plan for relieving
France, Belgium and Holland deserved commendation, the German forces had already
taken the necessary steps. We know that in Norway when the German troops went
in, there were food supplies to last for a year. We know that Poland, though not
a rich country, usually produces sufficient food for her people. Moreover, the
other countries which Herr Hitler has invaded all held considerable stocks when
the Germans entered and are themselves, in many cases, very substantial food
producers. If all this food is not available now, it can only be because it has
been removed to feed the people of Germany and to give them increased
rations-for a change-during the last few months. At this season of the year and
for some months to come, there is the least chance of scarcity as the harvest
has just been gathered in. The only agencies which can create famine in any part
of Europe, now and during the coming winter, will be German exactions or German
failure to distribute the supplies which they command.
There is another aspect. Many of the most valuable foods are essential to the
manufacture of vital war material. Fats are used to make explosives. Potatoes
make the alcohol for motor spirit. The plastic materials now so largely used in
the construction of aircraft are made of milk. If the Germans use these
commodities to help them to bomb our women and children, rather than to feed the
populations who produce them, we may be sure that imported foods would go the
same way, directly or indirectly, or be employed to relieve the enemy of the
responsibilities he has so wantonly assumed. Let Hitler bear his
responsibilities to the full, and let the peoples of Europe who groan beneath
his yoke aid in every way the coming of the day when that yoke will be broken.
Meanwhile, we can and we will arrange in advance for the speedy entry of food
into any part of the enslaved area, when this part has been wholly cleared of
German forces, and has genuinely regained its freedom. We shall do our best to
encourage the building up of reserves of food all over the world, so that there
will always be held up before the eyes of the peoples of Europe, including-I say
deliberately-the German and Austrian peoples, the certainty that the shattering
of the Nazi power will bring to them all immediate food, freedom and peace.
Rather more than a quarter of a year has passed since the new Government came
into power in this country. What a cataract of disaster has poured out upon us
since then! The trustful Dutch overwhelmed; their beloved and respected
Sovereign driven into exile; the peaceful city of Rotterdam the scene of a
massacre as hideous and brutal as anything in the Thirty Years' War; Belgium
invaded and beaten down; our own fine Expeditionary Force, which King Leopold
called to his rescue, cut off and almost captured, escaping as it seemed only by
a miracle and with the loss of all its equipment; our Ally, France, out; Italy
in against us; all France in the power of the enemy, all its arsenals and vast
masses of military material converted or convertible to the enemy's use; a
puppet Government set up at Vichy which may at any moment be forced to become
our foe; the whole western seaboard of Europe from the North Cape to the Spanish
frontier in German hands; all the ports, all the airfields on this immense front
employed against us as potential springboards of invasion. Moreover, the German
air power, numerically so far outstripping ours, has been brought so close to
our Island that what we used to dread greatly has come to pass and the hostile
bombers not only reach our shores in a few minutes and from many directions, but
can be escorted by their fighting aircraft. Why, Sir, if we had been confronted
at the beginning of May with such a prospect, it would have seemed incredible
that at the end of a period of horror and disaster, or at this point in a period
of horror and disaster, we should stand erect, sure of ourselves, masters of our
fate and with the conviction of final victory burning unquenchable in our
hearts. Few would have believed we could survive; none would have believed that
we should today not only feel stronger but should actually be stronger than we
have ever been before.
Let us see what has happened on the other side of the scales. The British nation
and the British Empire, finding themselves alone, stood undismayed against
disaster. No one flinched or wavered; nay, some who formerly thought of peace,
now think only of war. Our people are united and resolved, as they have never
been before. Death and ruin have become small things compared with the shame of
defeat or failure in duty. We cannot tell what lies ahead. It may be that even
greater ordeals lie before us. We shall face whatever is coming to us. We are
sure of ourselves and of our cause, and that is the supreme fact which has
emerged in these months of trial.
Meanwhile, we have not only fortified our hearts but our Island. We have rearmed
and rebuilt our armies in a degree which would have been deemed impossible a few
months ago. We have ferried across the Atlantic, in the month of July, thanks to
our friends over there, an immense mass of munitions of all kinds: cannon,
rifles, machine guns, cartridges and shell, all safely landed without the loss
of a gun or a round. The output of our own factories, working as they have never
worked before, has poured forth to the troops. The whole British Army is at
home. More than 2,000,000 determined men have rifles and bayonets in their hands
tonight, and three-quarters of them are in regular military formations. We have
never had armies like this in our Island in time of war. The whole Island
bristles against invaders, from the sea or from the air. As I explained to the
House in the middle of June, the stronger our Army at home, the larger must the
invading expedition be, and the larger the invading expedition, the less
difficult will be the task of the Navy in detecting its assembly and in
intercepting and destroying it in passage; and the greater also would be the
difficulty of feeding and supplying the invaders if ever they landed, in the
teeth of continuous naval and air attack on their communications. All this is
classical and venerable doctrine. As in Nelson's day, the maxim holds, "Our
first line of defense is the enemy's ports." Now air reconnaissance and
photography have brought to an old principle a new and potent aid.
Our Navy is far stronger than it was at the beginning of the war. The great flow
of new construction set on foot at the outbreak is now beginning to come in. We
hope our friends across the ocean will send us a timely reinforcement to bridge
the gap between the peace flotillas of 1939 and the war flotillas of 1941. There
is no difficulty in sending such aid. The seas and oceans are open. The U-boats
are contained. The magnetic mine is, up to the present time, effectively
mastered. The merchant tonnage under the British flag, after a year of unlimited
U-boat war, after eight months of intensive mining attack, is larger than when
we began. We have, in addition, under our control at least 4,000,000 tons of
shipping from the captive countries which has taken refuge here or in the
harbors of the Empire. Our stocks of food of all kinds are far more abundant
than in the days of peace, and a large and growing program of food production is
on foot.
Why do I say all this? Not, assuredly, to boast; not, assuredly, to give the
slightest countenance to complacency. The dangers we face are still enormous,
but so are our advantages and resources. I recount them because the people have
a right to know that there are solid grounds for the confidence which we feel,
and that we have good reason to believe ourselves capable, as I said in a very
dark hour two months ago, of continuing the war "if necessary alone, if
necessary for years." I say it also because the fact that the British Empire
stands invincible, and that Nazidom is still being resisted, will kindle again
the spark of hope in the breasts of hundreds of millions of down-trodden or
despairing men and women throughout Europe, and far beyond its bounds, and that
from these sparks there will presently come cleansing and devouring flame.
The great air battle which has been in progress over this Island for the last
few weeks has recently attained a high intensity. It is too soon to attempt to
assign limits either to its scale or to its duration. We must certainly expect
that greater efforts will be made by the enemy than any he has so far put forth.
Hostile air fields are still being developed in France and the Low Countries,
and the movement of squadrons and material for attacking us is still proceeding.
It is quite plain that Herr Hitler could not admit defeat in his air attack on
Great Britain without sustaining most serious injury. If after all his boastings
and bloodcurdling threats and lurid accounts trumpeted round the world of the
damage he has inflicted, of the vast numbers of our Air Force he has shot down,
so he says, with so little loss to himself; if after tales of the panic-stricken
British crushed in their holes cursing the plutocratic Parliament which has led
them to such a plight-if after all this his whole air onslaught were forced
after a while tamely to peter out, the Fuhrer's reputation for veracity of
statement might be seriously impugned. We may be sure, therefore, that he will
continue as long as he has the strength to do so, and as long as any
preoccupations he may have in respect of the Russian Air Force allow him to do
so.
On the other hand, the conditions and course of the fighting have so far been
favorable to us. I told the House two months ago that, whereas in France our
fighter aircraft were wont to inflict a loss of two or three to one upon the
Germans, and in the fighting at Dunkirk, which was a kind of no-man's-land, a
loss of about three or four to one, we expected that in an attack on this Island
we should achieve a larger ratio. This has certainly come true. It must also be
remembered that all the enemy machines and pilots which are shot down over our
Island, or over the seas which surround it, are either destroyed or captured;
whereas a considerable proportion of our machines, and also of our pilots, are
saved, and soon again in many cases come into action.
A vast and admirable system of salvage, directed by the Ministry of Aircraft
Production, ensures the speediest return to the fighting line of damaged
machines, and the most provident and speedy use of all the spare parts and
material. At the same time the splendid-nay, astounding-increase in the output
and repair of British aircraft and engines which Lord Beaverbrook has achieved
by a genius of organization and drive, which looks like magic, has given us
overflowing reserves of every type of aircraft, and an ever-mounting stream of
production both in quantity and quality. The enemy is, of course, far more
numerous than we are. But our new production already, as I am advised, largely
exceeds his, and the American production is only just beginning to flow in. It
is a fact, as I see from my daily returns, that our bomber and fighter strength
now, after all this fighting, are larger than they have ever been. We believe
that we shall be able to continue the air struggle indefinitely and as long as
the enemy pleases, and the longer it continues the more rapid will be our
approach, first towards that parity, and then into that superiority, in the air
upon which in a large measure the decision of the war depends.
The gratitude of every home in our Island, in our Empire, and indeed throughout
the world, except in the abodes of the guilty, goes out to the British airmen
who, undaunted by odds, unwearied in their constant challenge and mortal danger,
are turning the tide of the World War by their prowess and by their devotion. Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few. All hearts go out to the fighter pilots, whose brilliant actions we see with our
own eyes day after day; but we must never forget that all the time, night after
night, month after month, our bomber squadrons travel far into Germany, find
their targets in the darkness by the highest navigational skill, aim their
attacks, often under the heaviest fire, often with serious loss, with deliberate
careful discrimination, and inflict shattering blows upon the whole of the
technical and war-making structure of the Nazi power. On no part of the Royal
Air Force does the weight of the war fall more heavily than on the daylight
bombers, who will play an invaluable part in the case of invasion and whose
unflinching zeal it has been necessary in the meanwhile on numerous occasions to
restrain.
We are able to verify the results of bombing military targets in Germany, not
only by reports which reach us through many sources, but also, of course, by
photography. I have no hesitation in saying that this process of bombing the
military industries and communications of Germany and the air bases and storage
depots from which we are attacked, which process will continue upon an
ever-increasing scale until the end of the war, and may in another year attain
dimensions hitherto undreamed of, affords one at least of the most certain, if
not the shortest, of all the roads to victory. Even if the Nazi legions stood
triumphant on the Black Sea, or indeed upon the Caspian, even if Hitler was at
the gates of India, it would profit him nothing if at the same time the entire
economic and scientific apparatus of German war power lay shattered and
pulverized at home.
The fact that the invasion of this Island upon a large scale has become a far
more difficult operation with every week that has passed since we saved our Army
at Dunkirk, and our very great preponderance of sea power enable us to turn our
eyes and to turn our strength increasingly towards the Mediterranean and against
that other enemy who, without the slightest provocation, coldly and
deliberately, for greed and gain, stabbed France in the back in the moment of
her agony, and is now marching against us in Africa. The defection of France
has, of course, been deeply damaging to our position in what is called, somewhat
oddly, the Middle East. In the defense of Somaliland, for instance, we had
counted upon strong French forces attacking the Italians from Jibuti. We had
counted also upon the use of the French naval and air bases in the
Mediterranean, and particularly upon the North African shore. We had counted
upon the French Fleet. Even though metropolitan France was temporarily overrun,
there was no reason why the French Navy, substantial parts of the French Army,
the French Air Force and the French Empire overseas should not have continued
the struggle at our side.
Shielded by overwhelming sea power, possessed of invaluable strategic bases and
of ample funds, France might have remained one of the great combatants in the
struggle. By so doing, France would have preserved the continuity of her life,
and the French Empire might have advanced with the British Empire to the rescue
of the independence and integrity of the French Motherland. In our own case, if
we had been put in the terrible position of France, a contingency now happily
impossible, although, of course, it would have been the duty of all war leaders
to fight on here to the end, it would also have been their duty, as I indicated
in my speech of 4th June, to provide as far as possible for the Naval security
of Canada and our Dominions and to make sure they had the means to carry on the
struggle from beyond the oceans. Most of the other countries that have been
overrun by Germany for the time being have persevered valiantly and faithfully.
The Czechs, the Poles, the Norwegians, the Dutch, the Belgians are still in the
field, sword in hand, recognized by Great Britain and the United States as the
sole representative authorities and lawful Governments of their respective
States.
That France alone should lie prostrate at this moment is the crime, not of a
great and noble nation, but of what are called "the men of Vichy." We have
profound sympathy with the French people. Our old comradeship with France is not
dead. In General de Gaulle and his gallant band, that comradeship takes an
effective form. These free Frenchmen have been condemned to death by Vichy, but
the day will come, as surely as the sun will rise tomorrow, when their names
will be held in honor, and their names will be graven in stone in the streets
and villages of a France restored in a liberated Europe to its full freedom and
its ancient fame. But this conviction which I feel of the future cannot affect
the immediate problems which confront us in the Mediterranean and in Africa. It
had been decided some time before the beginning of the war not to defend the
Protectorate of Somaliland. That policy was changed in the early months of the
war. When the French gave in, and when our small forces there, a few battalions,
a few guns, were attacked by all the Italian troops, nearly two divisions, which
had formerly faced the French at Jibuti, it was right to withdraw our
detachments, virtually intact, for action elsewhere. Far larger operations no
doubt impend in the Middle East theater, and I shall certainly not attempt to
discuss or prophesy about their probable course. We have large armies and many
means of reinforcing them. We have the complete sea command of the eastern
Mediterranean. We intend to do our best to give a good account of ourselves, and
to discharge faithfully and resolutely all our obligations and duties in that
quarter of the world. More than that I do not think the House would wish me to
say at the present time.
A good many people have written to me to ask me to make on this occasion a
fuller statement of our war aims, and of the kind of peace we wish to make after
the war, than is contained in the very considerable declaration which was made
early in the autumn. Since then we have made common cause with Norway, Holland
and Belgium. We have recognized the Czech Government of Dr. Benes, and we have
told General de Gaulle that our success will carry with it the restoration of
France. I do not think it would be wise at this moment, while the battle rages
and the war is still perhaps only in its earlier stage, to embark upon elaborate
speculations about the future shape which should be given to Europe or the new
securities which must be arranged to spare mankind the miseries of a third World
War. The ground is not new, it has been frequently traversed and explored, and
many ideas are held about it in common by all good men, and all free men. But
before we can undertake the task of rebuilding we have not only to be convinced
ourselves, but we have to convince all other countries that the Nazi tyranny is
going to be finally broken. The right to guide
The course of world history is the noblest prize of victory. We are still
toiling up the hill; we have not yet reached the crest-line of it; we cannot
survey the landscape or even imagine what its condition will be when that
longed-for morning comes. The task which lies before us immediately is at once
more practical, more simple and more stern. I hope-indeed, I pray-that we shall
not be found unworthy of our victory if after toil and tribulation it is granted
to us. For the rest, we have to gain the victory. That is our task.
There is, however, one direction in which we can see a little more clearly
ahead. We have to think not only for ourselves but for the lasting security of
the cause and principles for which we are fighting and of the long future of the
British Commonwealth of Nations. Some months ago we came to the conclusion that
the interests of the United States and of the British Empire both required that
the United States should have facilities for the naval and air defense of the
Western Hemisphere against the attack of a Nazi power which might have acquired
temporary but lengthy control of a large part of Western Europe and its
formidable resources. We had therefore decided spontaneously, and without being
asked or offered any inducement, to inform the Government of the United States
that we would be glad to place such defense facilities at their disposal by
leasing suitable sites in our Transatlantic possessions for their greater
security against the unmeasured dangers of the future. The principle of
association of interests for common purposes between Great Britain and the
United States had developed even before the war. Various agreements had been
reached about certain small islands in the Pacific Ocean which had become
important as air fueling points. In all this line of thought we found ourselves
in very close harmony with the Government of Canada.
Presently we learned that anxiety was also felt in the United States about the
air and naval defense of their Atlantic seaboard, and President Roosevelt has
recently made it clear that he would like to discuss with us, and with the
Dominion of Canada and with Newfoundland, the development of American naval and
air facilities in Newfoundland and in the West Indies. There is, of course, no
question of any transference of sovereignty-that has never been suggested-or of
any action being taken without the consent or against the wishes of the various
Colonies concerned; but for our part, His Majesty's Government are entirely
willing to accord defense facilities to the United States on a 99 years'
leasehold basis, and we feel sure that our interests no less than theirs, and
the interests of the Colonies themselves and of Canada and Newfoundland, will be
served thereby. These are important steps. Undoubtedly this process means that
these two great organizations of the English-speaking democracies, the British
Empire and the United States, will have to be somewhat mixed up together in some
of their affairs for mutual and general one can stop it. Like the Mississippi,
it just keeps rolling alone. Let it roll. Let it roll on full flood, view the
process with any misgivings. I could not stop it if I wished; no one can stop
it. Like the Mississippi, it just keeps rolling alone. Let it roll. Let it roll
on full flood, inexorable, irresistible, benignant, to broader lands and better
days.