On 24 January the President and the Prime Minister held a press
conference on the lawn of the President's villa. Hatless in the bright
sunlight and carrying the familiar long cigarette holder, the
President sat beside Churchill, who was puffing on one of his
omnipresent big cigars. In the course of giving the Reporters his
comments on the work of the conference, Roosevelt surprised Mr.
Churchill by enunciating his now-famous unconditional surrender
formula for the defeat of the Axis Powers. By unconditional surrender,
the President explained with emphasis, he did not mean the destruction
of the peoples of Germany, Italy, and Japan, but the destruction of
the evil philosophies that had taken hold in those lands. Although the
matter had been discussed during the conference by the two leaders,
Churchill had made some reservations on the application of the formula
to Italy. The British War Cabinet, however, had no such qualms and
recommended that it apply to all three Axis Powers. The Prime Minister
evidently had been given no forewarning by the President that the
announcement was to be released to the press at this time, but despite
his astonishment Churchill- recovered
quickly and gave the concept his full support.
60 At the earnest
request of the President and the Prime Minister, Generals Giraud and de Gaulle managed to shake hands for the benefit of the
photog-
[37]
GENERALS HENRI GIRAUD AND CHARLES DE GAULLE shaking hands for the
photographers.
raphers and pledged their determination
to liberate France and to defeat the enemy.
Following the conference, the President
and the Prime Minister motored together
to Marrakech, the "Paris of the Sahara," whence Roosevelt enplaned for his
return trip to Washington. En route, he made stopovers in Liberia, Brazil,
and the West Indies, arriving safely in Miami on 31 January. Marshall
returned to the United States after visiting the North African front,
while King made several calls at naval installations on the way back.
Arnold set off for Chungking, where he, Lt. Gen. Brehon B. Somervell, the
Army Service Forces chief, and Sir John Dill were to inform Chiang
Kai-shek
of the outcome of the conference.
61
Casablanca in Retrospect
It appeared at the time to the American
staff that the thoroughness of British preparations and the long
experience of the British in international negotiations had a decisive
influence at the conference.
62 In
retrospect, the pains taken by the British seem to have been somewhat
unnecessary, given the uncertainties of the situation and the un-reconciled
views on the American side. Despite his forceful
presentation of the American military
case, General Marshall succeeded in making no real change in the direction
Allied strategy had taken in the second half of 1942. The Casablanca
Conference merely recognized that the initiative would be maintained by
the Allies both in the Pacific and in the Mediterranean, and defined
short-range objectives in those areas in terms of operations in the
South-Southwest Pacific and against Sicily. No real long-range plans for
the defeat of the Axis Powers emerged. The questions of Asiatic and
cross-Channel operations were simply left open for future
negotiation. Agreement on a round-the-clock
combined bomber offensive was reached but it was not tied in precisely
with Mediterranean or cross-Channel operations.
Nor were the relationships among these operations and Pacific and Asiatic
undertakings clearly defined.
The Casablanca Conference was thus indecisive on basic
strategic issues. The indecisiveness appeared to the U.S. staff to be a
victory for the British. If Casablanca
marked essentially the reaffirma-
[38]
tion of the old in strategic planning, it was also a
foreshadowing of the new. The simple terms in which War Department
planners had tried to solve the problem of limiting operations in
subsidiary theaters had failed. The problem had become so complex-in the
new phase of the war-that they would have to start out all over again and
find new formulas. However far apart the two nations appeared
to be on operational strategy, there was a hopeful sign for the future in
the staffs' agreement at last on a general
system of command to govern combined
British and U.S. operations.63 The Americans, especially, could take
comfort from the incorporation in the set of guiding
principles adopted of the conception of unified command-under a supreme
commander-that Marshall and his staff had been urging from early in the
war.
Significant portents emerged in the American staff's
stress on enlarging the scope of the war against Japan and, above all, in
the President's announcement of the unconditional surrender concept. So
important did the President regard this statement of purpose that he
suggested to the correspondents that they might call the Casablanca
Conference the " `Unconditional Surrender' Meeting."
64 In the final analysis, his announcement of the
unconditional surrender formula was the most significant contribution of
the conference-one that, for better or worse, was to have profound
influence on the subsequent conduct of the war.
The President had actually informed the ,JCS of his
intention to support this concept as the basic Allied aim in the war in a meeting at the White House on 7 January, one
week before the conference. No
study of the meaning of this formula for the conduct of the war was made
by either the Army or the Joint Staff before or during the conferences
striking illustration of the want of understanding between the White House
and the military staffs.65
Nor did the Combined Chiefs of Staff discuss the significance of the
concept to which the President and Prime Minister committed themselves
publicly at Casablanca and thereby raised issues long to be debated in
the war and postwar periods.66
[39]
Leaving aside its external effects, this principle was
to have important internal consequences for the coalition. It is
significant that the President did not set forth as his war aim the
objective of restoring the European or Asian balance of power-although, to
some observers at least, the United States had been drawn into the global
and coalition struggle because the balance of power on the opposite shores
of both the Atlantic and the
Pacific had been upsets
67 Nor was his concern here with the terms of
settlement. What the President appeared
to be offering at the time was a simple formula of common and resolute
purpose-a slogan that would rally the Allies for victory and drive home to
friend and foe alike that this time there would be no negotiated peace and
no "escape clauses" offered by another Fourteen Points. In particular, it
might serve to reassure the Russians-who were bound to be disappointed by
the continued failure of the
Western Powers to open the second front in Europe-of the uncompromising
determination of the Western Powers to wage a fight to the finish with
Germany. It was vague enough to permit general agreement on the planning
for the defeat of Germany and yet specific enough to prevent internal
dissension over the terms of surrender.
But, in retrospect, this concept, which the other partners came to accept,
served to conceal the divergent national objectives back of the common
strategy eventually worked out by the Western Powers with the
Soviet ally. It is, of course, still a moot point whether anything
more or less than the single-track idea of unconditional surrender would
have succeeded in this "strange alliance."
For American staff planning, the President's
announcement was to prove no less important. To date the President had
asserted control over the U.S. military
strategy on grounds of policy. The specific objectives of the President,
for which he was prepared to run serious political and military risks,
even against the better judgment of his military advisers,
were the traditional defensive objectives of U.S. policy-essentially the
security of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. These were all reflected in
the politico-military policies he had actively supported in 1942-establishing the line Australia-Hawaii, keeping China in the war,
maintaining the lines of communication
to the United Kingdom, invading North Africa. Beyond these limits the
United States had no well-defined objectives.
It may be conjectured that at this point in the war, when these objectives
were secured, the President passed at once in his mind, impatiently, to
the peace conferences that would follow
a clear-cut victory, at which he could appear-uncommitted and
disinterested -to emulate the purposes, while avoiding the mistakes, of
President Wilson. Indeed, from the
beginning of the war he had shown a strong disposition to postpone
territorial and political settlements
[40]
until after the war.68 Whatever he may have thought,
his apparent reluctance to spell out his political objectives discouraged,
though it did not entirely prevent
the U.S. military authorities from expecting and requesting guidance on
the questions of national policy that would in fact be influenced-or
simply settled-by future operations.
The strategic planners, who had been concerned in 1940,
1941, and 1942 over the President's apparent indifference to military
expediency, were doubtless pleased to have a freer hand to work out their
problems in strictly military terms. But it was by no means a coincidence
that, as the war progressed, they would begin to note, and even to insist,
that there were really no "strictly military" problems in grand strategy
and to keep closer relations with the White House and the State Department
in the hope of getting guidance (and, doubtless, of exercising some
influence) on the "political"
decisions.
Indeed, the principal political decisions
that the President made during the midwar years with reference to military
operations were made by default. For this reason, of course, they cannot
be documented and dated in the same way that active decisions can be
documented. This fact is all the more true because the CCS and the JCS,
the only bodies that had any standing on military operations, were reluctant
to raise political questions.
For the U.S. military staff, unconditional
surrender was to serve essentially as a military objective, reinforcing
their own notions of a concentrated, decisive war. To them unconditional
surrender provided a definable goal that was to be attained as
expeditiously as possible. Winning the war decisively would obtain top
priority, just as it had in the war games held in peacetime. A convenient
handle had thus been provided to the military that could be used in
formulating their plans. Henceforth
the basic premise of all planning to defeat Germany
and Japan would be the accomplishment
of unconditional surrender.
At the same time, the formula complicated
the task of the U.S. military staff in midwar. It meant that they would
now-largely without consistent Presidential
guidance-have to work out the precise terms of the offensive phase of the
war through negotiation with the Allies. The President's concern in
1943-44 would be primarily that of meeting
the contractual relations with the Allies. With the British, the close
partner, this would mean seeing to
it that somehow their notion of a cross-Channel operation was reconciled
with the American. With the Russians, with whom relations were not so
close, it signified continuing to bolster the Soviet war effort with
lend-lease and the earliest possible establishment of a second front in
Europe. In the President's view, a firm alliance with the USSR and Great
Britain must be sedulously cultivated. He himself would be serving as a
medi-
[41]
ator among the Allies-essentially a Wilsonian
position.
The great debate on European strategy between the
Americans and the British -opened by the decision for TORCH-endured
down to the summer of 1944. It is not surprising that the American
strategists, left largely on their own to resolve the problems of
offensive warfare with the Allied staffs, should take refuge in their
conventional view of war as a big engagement. But only gradually did the
Americans-with Marshall as the foremost spokesman-win their way back to
the notion of waging a war of mass and concentration on the Continent.
Their task was to secure agreement of the President, the British, and
eventually the Russians. In the debate with the Allies, the trump card
held by the U.S. staff was the fresh, flexible military power of the
United States-the forces it had built up and still had not committed. The series of
decisions reached at the great international conferences of 1943 and
1944-from Casablanca through the Second Quebec-reflect the compromises
worked out by the British and Americans-between
the principles of opportunism and
long-range commitments, between a
war of attrition and a war of mass and concentration. In the meantime,
old fronts were being expanded and new fronts were being opened all over
the world. Significant as the signs and portents of Casablanca proved to
be in the final analysis, more significant for the immediate future was
the prospect that the advances already begun in the Mediterranean
and the Pacific would be carried on
in the two areas in which U.S. deployment had been especially heavy in
1942.
[42]
Endnotes
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