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The John Batchelor Show

S8 Ep880: The attack on Pearl Harbor instantly unifies the American public and merges separate global conflicts into World War II. Lindbergh immediately offers his services as a loyal citizen, but FDR personally blocks his return to the military. Roosevelt refuse

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Arts, Books, News, Society & Culture

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 17 May 2026

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The attack on Pearl Harbor instantly unifies the American public and merges separate global conflicts into World War II. Lindbergh immediately offers his services as a loyal citizen, but FDR personally blocks his return to the military. Roosevelt refuses to allow his chief critic to become a military hero, leaving Lindbergh to serve as a civilian consultant. Labeled a "Nazi fellow traveler," Lindbergh surreptitiously flies unauthorized combat missions in the Pacific to train pilots and test aircraft. He lived until 1974, with his legacy forever defined by his bitter pre-war struggle against the Roosevelt administration. (8/8)
1936

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm John Batchew with Professor H.W. Brands. America First is his new book, Roosevelt v. Lindberg, in the shadow of war. I read from the professor's manuscript.

0:11.7

Mr. President, what's this about Japan? Churchill said as he called Roosevelt. It's quite true, Roosevelt replied.

0:19.2

They have attacked us at Pearl Harbor.

0:23.3

We're all in the same boat now.

0:27.7

Churchill says, this certainly simplifies things.

0:30.7

Professor, the story was about Europe.

0:39.4

They're now attacked by Japan, which I believe at one point the prime minister referred to as you'll take care of the dog Japan for us.

0:52.6

So I've always wondered about those four days between the 8th of December when Roosevelt asked for a declaration of war and the 8th when Churchill, when Hitler declares war.

0:54.1

What happened in Germany? Why did you do that?

0:55.6

So this is one of those great what if moments in history. Because the debate over American

1:01.6

entry into the war was 95% about America entry into the European war. Now, in hindsight, we think

1:09.7

of this as World War II. but in those days, these are two

1:13.3

separate wars. And Roosevelt has quietly been putting pressure upon Japan, thinking that, okay, we have to

1:20.2

prevent Japan from expanding throughout the Pacific part of Asia. But there was an alliance that

1:26.9

linked Germany to Japan, And so Roosevelt saw that

1:29.6

connection. And anyway, so the Japanese decide for their own reasons that they're going to

1:35.4

attack the United States because the United States has essentially delivered an ultimatum,

1:39.3

saying you have to pull out of Indonesia, you have to end the war in China. And the Japanese

1:43.0

aren't going to do it. They're going to, in fact, expand the war. They know that will mean war against the United States,

1:47.3

and they want to land the first blow. America won't be expecting it in Hawaii, and so it'll work.

1:53.2

So the Japanese attack, Pearl Harbor. Roosevelt is surprised by the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor,

1:59.1

not particularly surprised by a Japanese attack.

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