Our Prime Minister made a gaffe.......

delboy

God save the Queen.......
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Guys, please be assured that I hold the greatest respect for the brave US men and women that fought in WW II and this article does not degrade there efforts.:bowdown:

But the fact is our prime minister is a public school prat………………….

Mr Cameron, on his first visit to the U.S. as Prime Minister, made his gaffe in an interview with Sky News.
'I think it's important in life to speak as it is, and the fact is that we are a very effective partner of the U.S., but we are the junior partner,' he said. 'We were the junior partner in 1940 when we were fighting the Nazis.'
In fact, Britain under the leadership of Churchill - one of Mr Cameron's heroes - stood alone in 1940 against Nazi Germany and had far more men under arms than the U.S. until 1944.
While Britain fought on, with some material assistance from the U.S., America did not actually enter the war until December 1941 after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor.

And Britain lost a total of 449,800 war dead compared with 418,500 Americans.
Even as Downing Street was trying to repair the damage, the PM's error was compounded in a further interview, recorded earlier, with the American network ABC news.
He said: 'We were the junior partner in 1940 when we were fighting against Hitler; we are the junior partner now.
'I think you shouldn't pretend to be something you're not.'
Historian Andrew Roberts, author of the recent Second World War history The Storm of War, said: 'The Prime Minister is wrong. He shouldn't wear a hair shirt.

'In the early years of the war Britain had an army of 2.4million men in the field when the Americans had 240,000 - one tenth of the fighting force.
'It was not really until 1944 that the Americans had more men in the field than the UK, the British Empire and Commonwealth. In 1940 there was material help from America, but not belligerency against the Nazis.
'Britain was the dominant partner in terms of the strategy until at least 1943.'
Labour was quick to leap on Mr Cameron's mistake. Former defence minister Kevan Jones told the Mail: 'David Cameron is guilty of talking down Britain and disrespecting Second World War veterans who know that Britain was fighting alone against Nazi tyranny while America was still putting its fighting boots on.'

On the move: David Cameron boarding the train for New York
As hostile reaction swept the internet, Mr Cameron's gaffe was greeted with dismay by retired military men.
SAS hero Andy McNab said: 'It's very important to get this history right because people are still living who fought in 1940.
'There are still survivors of Dunkirk and fighter pilots from the Battle of Britain. For them it is very, very important to recognise the role they played. This is living history.'

General Cordingley said: ' Having just spent the day with some Normandy veterans, I'm surprised that the Prime Minister has forgotten the sacrifice of those who fought in the Battle of Britain and North Africa before the U.S. entered the war and those who were bombed during the Blitz.'
General Sir Mike Jackson, a former head of the Army, said: 'The Prime Minister's history is not as good as it should be. Without doubt we were the superior partner until America's entry into the war. I'm sure the Prime Minister's jet lag is catching up with him.'


CORRELLI BARNETT: BRITAIN BORE THE BRUNT
David Cameron's not just a travesty of the truth but also an insult to the memory of all those Britons who fought so heroically in the dark months of 1940, when this country stood alone against the Reich's tyranny.
Contrary to his absurd claim, there was no partnership whatsoever between the U.S. and Britain in that year. indeed, America was not involved in the war at all, either militarily or in supplying material support.
Despite the U.S.'s colossal resources and tradition of liberty, the republic did little to aid Britain's cause against the Nazis. Under the American Neutrality Act, it was actually illegal for the U.S. to ship any goods to a combatant unless cash was paid on strictly commercial terms.
Therefore, in the summer of 1940, Churchill's government had to pay up front for all the military equipment and aircraft it bought from the U.S., almost bankrupting itself by early 1941.
Nor was the U.S. remotely supportive during the Battle of Britain.

On a lighter note, I did like the comment from soldier on the French……
Cameron says we were the junior partners in 1940. Who were we junior partners to in 1940 ?? The French ? They surrendered in June 1940 and took up cheese eating….:thumbsup:
 
You are correct sir. The British where the ones who originally stood up to Hitler's tyranny; the US spent most of their time in the late 30's trying to be neutral, and didn't get off the pot really until the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, then it took us a couple of years to get spun up. Once the full might of America's industry was brought to bear, the US did start becoming the senior partner and called many of the shots, but not all. The Germans were not bombing Washington DC every night, but London. Churchill carried a lot of weight with Rooslevelt. It was the Brits that convinced the US to start in North Africa.

The contributions to keeping a madman like Hitler at bay by the British soldier should never be maginalized. That bond between the US and GB has stood ever since.
 
Don't forget the contributions of the colonies eh?

Canada, Australia and New Zealand were there from the start.

And a tip of the hat to our friends the Ruskies who lost approx 10 million soldiers and 12 to 15 million civilians. :O

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cheers
ken
 
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Dig a little deeper and you will find unfortunate truth that American bankers and families like the Rockefellers financed the Nazi war machine and were loaning them money right up until it became illegal to do business with Nazi Germany which happened to be same time we entered the war .
 
You got that right, but the Canadian, Kiwi and Aussie PM's didn't make the gaffe :)
 
Dig a little deeper and you will find unfortunate truth that American bankers and families like the Rockefellers financed the Nazi war machine and were loaning them money right up until it became illegal to do business with Nazi Germany which happened to be same time we entered the war .

Sounds kinda familiar with todays American (GE for one to be specific) Companies with Iran :whistle:

I guess we'll stop when we see that BIG BRIGHT GLOW on the Horizon :laugh:
 
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