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The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the
Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1941-1945 by
Michael R. Beschloss
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- Hardcover: 400 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.20 x
9.74 x 6.44
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster; ISBN: 0684810271; (October 22,
2002)
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Long before an Allied victory
was assured during World War II, the Big Three--Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin--began
discussing how to prevent Germany from ever again threatening the world.
The fact that Germany today
is a peaceful, democratic ally of the U.S. is "one of America's great twentieth-century
international achievements," writes esteemed historian Michael Beschloss. How
such a transformation was accomplished is the subject of The Conquerors.
Drawing on thousands of previously unreleased documents,
secret audio recordings, private diaries, and other information recently made
available, Beschloss details the complex diplomacy between the Allied leaders,
including their differences over whether to demand Germany's unconditional
surrender; how, if at all, to divide Germany after the war; and how to effectively
punish Germany without creating the kind of resentment that led to the rise
of Hitler.
The relationship between the three leaders, and
later, Truman, is fascinating, as Beschloss reveals private conversations,
ulterior motives, and numerous back-channel deals that took place. Of particular
interest is the maneuvering of Roosevelt and Churchill, who were both concerned
that the Soviets would attempt a postwar power grab in Western Europe if given
the chance.
The book also deals with Roosevelt's reluctance
to deal with Germany's systematic extermination of the Jews, and the role that
his old friend and Treasury Secretary, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., played in pushing
the President into action. After learning of the Holocaust, Morgenthau became
obsessed with punishing Germany severely, drafting a plan that called for the
complete destruction of their mines and factories as a way of forcing Germany
into subsistence farming--ideas that put him at odds with Secretary of State
Cordell Hull, Secretary of War Henry Stimson, and many others in the administration.
The Conquerors is a superbly written, if
brief, treatment of the political events leading up to the defeat of Germany,
with the main players brought vividly to life by Beschloss's keen eye for detail
and his ability to expose the human strengths and weaknesses of the participants.
--Shawn Carkonen
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