The Campaign to Lie America Into World War II
Before Pearl Harbor, there was an elaborate British influence operation of forged documents, fake news, and manipulation.
A World
War II era poster showing portraits of Franklin Roosevelt and Winston
Churchill with the title "Liberators of The World". The poster also
shows the flags of the Allies, and the sinking of the Japanese
battleship Haruna. (Photo by David J. & Janice L. Frent/Corbis via
Getty Images)
Seventy-eight years ago, on December
6, 1941, the United States was at peace with world. The next morning,
local time, the Empire of Japan bombed the U.S. Navy base at Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii. Four days later, Nazi Germany issued a declaration of
war against the United States. The American people were now unalterably
involved in a global conflict that would take the lives of over 400,000
of their native sons.
But
before Japan opened this door to war, the United States had been the
target of an elaborate, covert influence campaign meant to push public
opinion, by hook or by crook, into supporting intervention on the side
of the British. Conducted by the United Kingdom’s MI6 intelligence
service, it involved sometimes witting (and often unwitting)
collaboration with the highest echelons of the U.S. government and media
establishment.
In the early summer of 1940, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill dispatched
intelligence agent William Stephenson to North America to establish the
innocuous-sounding British Security Coordination (BSC).
The Canadian-born Stephenson was a World War I flying ace and wealthy
industrialist who had been a close Churchill confidant for several
years. Adopting the codename “Intrepid” during his operations, spymaster
Stephenson served as the main inspiration for James Bond (whose
creator, Ian Fleming, worked with the BSC).
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