Fireside Chat #16 by President Franklin D. Roosevelt
 
 
On National Security [The Arsenal of Democracy]
December  29, 1940
 
Radio Address  of the President, Delivered from the White House
MY FRIENDS: 
This is not a fireside chat on war. It is a talk on national security, because the nub of the whole purpose of your President is to keep you now, and your children later,  and your grandchildren much later, out of a last-ditch war for the preservation of American independence and all of the things that American independence means  to you and to me and to ours.
Tonight, in the presence of a world crisis, my mind goes back eight years to a night in the midst of a domestic crisis. It was a time when the wheels of American industry  were grinding to a full stop, when the whole banking system of our country had ceased to function.
I well remember  that while I sat in my study in the White House, preparing to talk with the  people of the United States, I had before my eyes the picture of all those Americans  with whom I was talking. I saw the workmen in the mills, the mines, the factories;  the girl behind the counter; the small shopkeeper; the farmer doing his spring  plowing; the widows and the old men wondering about their life's savings. 
 I tried to convey  to the great mass of American people what the banking crisis meant to them in  their daily lives.
 Tonight, I want  to do the same thing, with the same people,  in this new crisis which faces America.
 We met the issue  of 1933 with courage and realism. 
 We face this new  crisis -- this new threat to the security of our nation -- with the same courage  and realism.
 Never before since  Jamestown and Plymouth Rock has our American civilization been in such danger  as now.
 For, on September  27th, 1940, this year, by an agreement signed in Berlin, three powerful nations,  two in Europe and one in Asia, joined themselves together in the threat that  if the United States of America interfered with or blocked the expansion program  of these three nations -- a program aimed at world control -- they would unite  in ultimate action against the United States.
 The Nazi masters  of Germany have made it clear that they intend not only to dominate all life  and thought in their own country, but also to enslave the whole of Europe, and  then to use the resources of Europe to dominate the rest of the world.
 It was only three  weeks ago their leader stated this: " There are two worlds that stand opposed  to each other." And then in defiant reply to his opponents, he said this:  "Others are correct when they say: With this world we cannot ever reconcile  ourselves .... I can beat any other power in the world." So said the leader  of the Nazis.
 In other words,  the Axis not merely admits but the Axis proclaims that there can be no ultimate  peace between their philosophy of government and our philosophy of government.
 In view of the  nature of this undeniable threat, it can be asserted, properly and categorically,  that the United States has no right or reason to encourage talk of peace, until  the day shall come when there is a clear intention on the part of the aggressor  nations to abandon all thought of  dominating or conquering the world. 
 At this moment,  the forces of the states that are leagued against all peoples who live in freedom  are being held away from our shores. The Germans and the Italians are being  blocked on the other side of the Atlantic by the British, and by the Greeks,  and by thousands of soldiers and sailors who were able to escape from subjugated  countries. In Asia the Japanese are being engaged by the Chinese nation in another  great defense.
 In the Pacific  Ocean is our fleet.
 Some of our people  like to believe that wars in Europe and in Asia are of no concern to us. But  it is a matter of most vital concern to us that European and Asiatic war-makers  should not gain control of the oceans which lead to this hemisphere.
 One hundred and  seventeen years ago the Monroe Doctrine was conceived by our Government as a  measure of defense in the face of a threat against this hemisphere by an alliance  in Continental Europe. Thereafter, we stood (on) guard in the Atlantic, with  the British as neighbors. There was no treaty. There was no "unwritten  agreement."
 And yet, there  was the feeling, proven correct by history, that we as neighbors could settle  any disputes in peaceful fashion. And the fact is that during the whole of this  time the Western Hemisphere has remained free from aggression from Europe or  from Asia.
 Does anyone seriously  believe that we need to fear attack anywhere in the Americas while a free Britain  remains our most powerful naval neighbor in the Atlantic? And does anyone seriously  believe, on the other hand, that we could rest easy if the Axis powers were  our neighbors there?
 If Great Britain  goes down, the Axis powers will control the continents of Europe, Asia, Africa,  Australia, and the high seas -- and they will be in a position to bring enormous  military and naval resources against this hemisphere. It is no exaggeration  to say that all of us, in all the Americas,  would be living at the point of  a gun -- a gun loaded with explosive bullets, economic as well as military.
 We should enter  upon a new and terrible era in which the whole world, our hemisphere included,  would be run by threats of brute force. And to survive in such a world, we would  have to convert ourselves permanently into a militaristic power on the basis  of war economy.
 Some of us like  to believe that even if (Great) Britain falls, we are still safe, because of  the broad expanse of the Atlantic and of the Pacific.
 But the width  of those (these) oceans is not what it  was in the days of clipper ships. At  one point between Africa and Brazil the distance is less from Washington than  it is from Washington to Denver, Colorado -- five hours for the latest type  of bomber. And at the North end of the Pacific Ocean America and Asia almost  touch each other.
 Why, even today  we have planes that (which) could fly from the British Isles to New England  and back again without refueling. And remember that the range of a (the) modern  bomber is ever being increased. 
 During the past  week many people in all parts of the nation have told me what they wanted me  to say tonight. Almost all of them expressed a courageous desire to hear the  plain truth about the gravity of the  situation. One telegram, however, expressed  the attitude of the small minority who want to see no evil and hear no evil,  even though they know in their hearts that evil exists. That telegram begged  me not to tell again of the ease with which our American cities could be bombed  by any hostile power which had gained bases in this Western Hemisphere. The  gist of that telegram was: "Please,  Mr. President, don't frighten us by  telling us the facts."
 Frankly and definitely  there is danger ahead -- danger against  which we must prepare. But we well know  that we cannot escape danger (it), or the fear of danger, by crawling into bed  and pulling the covers over our heads.
 Some nations of  Europe were bound by solemn non-intervention pacts with Germany. Other nations  were assured by Germany that they need never fear invasion. Non-intervention  pact or not, the fact remains that they were attacked, overrun, (and) thrown  into (the) modern (form of) slavery at an hour's notice, or even without any  notice at all. As an exiled leader of one of these nations said to me the other  day, "The notice was a minus quantity. It was given to my Government two  hours after German troops had poured into  my country in a hundred places."
 The fate of these  nations tells us what it means to live at the point of a Nazi gun.
 The Nazis have  justified such actions by various pious frauds. One of these frauds is the claim  that they are occupying a nation for the purpose of "restoring order."  Another is that they are occupying or controlling a nation on the excuse that  they are "protecting it" against the aggression of somebody else.
 For example, Germany  has said that she was occupying Belgium to save the Belgians from the British.  Would she then hesitate to say to any South American country, "We are occupying  you to protect you from aggression by the United States?"
 Belgium today  is being used as an invasion base against Britain, now fighting for its life.  And any South American country, in Nazi hands, would always constitute a jumping-off  place for German attack on any one of the other republics of this hemisphere.
 Analyze for yourselves  the future of two other places even nearer to Germany if the Nazis won. Could  Ireland hold out? Would Irish freedom be permitted as an amazing pet exception  in an unfree world? Or the Islands of the Azores which still fly the flag of  Portugal after five centuries? You and I  think of Hawaii as an outpost of defense  in the Pacific. And yet, the Azores are closer to our shores in the Atlantic  than Hawaii is on the other side. 
 There are those  who say that the Axis powers would never have any desire to attack the Western  Hemisphere. That (this) is the same dangerous form of wishful thinking which  has destroyed the powers of resistance of so many conquered peoples. The plain  facts are that the Nazis have proclaimed, time and again, that all other races  are their inferiors and therefore subject to their orders. And most important  of all, the vast resources and wealth of this American Hemisphere constitute  the most tempting loot in all of the round world.
 Let us no longer  blind ourselves to the undeniable fact that the evil forces which have crushed  and undermined and corrupted so many others are already within our own gates.  Your Government knows much about them and every day is ferreting them out.
 Their secret emissaries  are active in our own and in neighboring countries. They seek to stir up suspicion  and dissension to cause internal strife. They try to turn capital against labor,  and vice versa. They try to reawaken long slumbering racist and religious enmities  which should have no place in this country.  They are active in every group that  promotes intolerance. They exploit for their own ends our own natural abhorrence  of war. These trouble-breeders have but one purpose. It is to divide our people,  to divide them into hostile groups and to destroy our unity and shatter our  will to defend ourselves.
 There are also  American citizens, many of then in high places, who, unwittingly in most cases,  are aiding and abetting the work of these agents. I do not charge these American  citizens with being foreign agents. But I do charge them with doing exactly  the kind of work that the dictators want done in the United States.
 These people not  only believe that we can save our own skins by shutting our eyes to the fate  of other nations. Some of them go much further than that. They say that we can  and should become the friends and even  the partners of the Axis powers. Some  of them even suggest that we should imitate the methods of the dictatorships.  But Americans never can and never will do that.
 The experience  of the past two years has proven beyond doubt that no nation can appease the  Nazis. No man can tame a tiger into a kitten by stroking it. There can be no  appeasement with ruthlessness. There can be no reasoning with an incendiary  bomb. We know now that a nation can have peace with the Nazis only at the price  of total surrender.
 Even the people  of Italy have been forced to become accomplices of the Nazis, but at this moment  they do not know how soon they will be embraced to death by their allies. 
 The American appeasers  ignore the warning to be found in the fate of Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland,  Norway, Belgium, the Netherlands, Denmark  and France. They tell you that the  Axis powers are going to win anyway; that all of this bloodshed in the world  could be saved, that the United States might just as well throw its influence  into the scale of a dictated peace, and get the best out of it that we can.
 They call it a  "negotiated peace." Nonsense! Is it a negotiated peace if a gang of  outlaws surrounds your community and on threat of extermination makes you pay  tribute to save your own skins? 
 Such a dictated  peace would be no peace at all. It would  be only another armistice, leading  to the most gigantic armament race and the most devastating trade wars in all  history. And in these contests the Americas would offer the only real resistance  to the Axis powers.
 With all their  vaunted efficiency, with all their (and) parade of pious purpose in this war,  there are still in their background the concentration camp and the servants  of God in chains.
 The history of  recent years proves that the shootings and the chains and the concentration  camps are not simply the transient tools but the very altars of modern dictatorships.  They may talk of a "new order" in the world, but what they have in  mind is only (but) a revival of the oldest and the worst tyranny. In that there  is no liberty, no religion, no hope.
 The proposed "new  order" is the very opposite of a United States of Europe or a United States  of Asia. It is not a government based upon the consent of the governed. It is  not a union of ordinary, self-respecting  men and women to protect themselves  and their freedom and their dignity from oppression. It is an unholy alliance  of power and pelf to dominate and to enslave the human race.
 The British people  and their allies today are conducting an active war against this unholy alliance.  Our own future security is greatly dependent on the outcome of that fight. Our  ability to "keep out of war" is going to be affected by that outcome.
 Thinking in terms  of today and tomorrow, I make the direct statement to the American people that  there is far less chance of the United States getting into war if we do all  we can now to support the nations defending themselves against attack by the  Axis than if we acquiesce in their defeat,  submit tamely to an Axis victory,  and wait our turn to be the object of attack in another war later on.
 If we are to be  completely honest with ourselves, we must admit that there is risk in any course  we may take. But I deeply believe that the great majority of our people agree  that the course that I advocate involves the least risk now and the greatest  hope for world peace in the future.
 The people of  Europe who are defending themselves do not ask us to do their fighting. They  ask us for the implements of war, the planes, the tanks, the guns, the freighters  which will enable them to fight for their  liberty and for our security. Emphatically  we must get these weapons to them, get them  to them in sufficient volume and  quickly enough, so that we and our children will be saved the agony and suffering  of war which others have had to endure.
 Let not the defeatists  tell us that it is too late. It will never  be earlier. Tomorrow will be later  than today. 
 Certain facts are self-evident. 
 In a military  sense Great Britain and the British Empire are today the spearhead of resistance  to world conquest. And they are putting up  a fight which will live forever in  the story of human gallantry.
 There is no demand  for sending an American Expeditionary Force outside our own borders. There is  no intention by any member of your Government to send such a force. You can,  therefore, nail -- nail any talk about  sending armies to Europe as deliberate  untruth.
 Our national policy  is not directed toward war. Its sole purpose is to keep war away from our country  and away from our people.
 Democracy's fight  against world conquest is being greatly aided, and must be more greatly aided,  by the rearmament of the United States and by sending every ounce and every  ton of munitions and supplies that we can possibly spare to help the defenders  who are in the front lines. And it is no more unneutral for us to do that than  it is for Sweden, Russia and other nations near Germany to send steel and ore  and oil and other war materials into Germany every day in the week.
 We are planning  our own defense with the utmost urgency, and in its vast scale we must integrate  the war needs of Britain and the other free nations which are resisting aggression.
 This is not a  matter of sentiment or of controversial personal opinion. It is a matter of  realistic, practical military policy, based on the advice of our military experts  who are in close touch with existing warfare. These military and naval experts  and the members of the Congress and the Administration have a single-minded  purpose -- the defense of the United States.
 This nation is  making a great effort to produce everything that is necessary in this emergency  -- and with all possible speed. And this great effort requires great sacrifice.
 I would ask no  one to defend a democracy which in turn would not defend everyone in the nation  against want and privation. The strength of this nation shall not be diluted  by the failure of the Government to protect the economic well-being of its (all)  citizens.
 If our capacity  to produce is limited by machines, it must ever be remembered that these machines  are operated by the skill and the stamina  of the workers. As the Government  is determined to protect the rights of the  workers, so the nation has a right  to expect that the men who man the machines will discharge their full responsibilities  to the urgent needs of defense.
 The worker possesses  the same human dignity and is entitled to  the same security of position as the  engineer or the manager or the owner. For the workers provide the human power  that turns out the destroyers, and the (air)planes and the tanks.
 The nation expects  our defense industries to continue operation without interruption by strikes  or lockouts. It expects and insists that  management and workers will reconcile  their differences by voluntary or legal  means, to continue to produce the supplies  that are so sorely needed.
 And on the economic  side of our great defense program, we are,  as you know, bending every effort  to maintain stability of prices and with that the stability of the cost of living.
 Nine days ago  I announced the setting up of a more effective organization to direct our gigantic  efforts to increase the production of munitions. The appropriation of vast sums  of money and a well coordinated executive direction of our defense efforts are  not in themselves enough. Guns, planes, (and) ships and many other things have  to be built in the factories and the arsenals of America. They have to be produced  by workers and managers and engineers with the aid of machines which in turn  have to be built by hundreds of thousands  of workers throughout the land.
 In this great  work there has been splendid cooperation between the Government and industry  and labor, and I am very thankful. 
 American industrial  genius, unmatched throughout all the world  in the solution of production problems,  has been called upon to bring its resources  and its talents into action. Manufacturers  of watches, of farm implements, of linotypes, and cash registers, and automobiles,  and sewing machines, and lawn mowers and locomotives are now making fuses, bomb  packing crates, telescope mounts, shells,  and pistols and tanks.
 But all of our  present efforts are not enough. We must have more ships, more guns, more planes  -- more of everything. And this can only  be accomplished if we discard the notion  of "business as usual." This job cannot be done merely by superimposing  on the existing productive facilities the added requirements of the nation for  defense.
 Our defense efforts  must not be blocked by those who fear the future consequences of surplus plant  capacity. The possible consequences of failure of our defense efforts now are  much more to be feared.
 And after the  present needs of our defense are past, a proper handling of the country's peacetime  needs will require all of the new productive capacity -- if not still more.
 No pessimistic  policy about the future of America shall  delay the immediate expansion of those  industries essential to defense. We need them.
 I want to make  it clear that it is the purpose of the nation to build now with all possible  speed every machine, every arsenal, every (and) factory that we need to manufacture  our defense material. We have the men -- the skill -- the wealth -- and above  all, the will.
 I am confident  that if and when production of consumer or luxury goods in certain industries  requires the use of machines and raw materials that are essential for defense  purposes, then such production must yield,  and will gladly yield, to our primary  and compelling purpose.
 So I appeal to  the owners of plants -- to the managers -to the workers -- to our own Government  employees -- to put every ounce of effort  into producing these munitions swiftly  and without stint. (And) With this appeal  I give you the pledge that all of  us who are officers of your Government will devote ourselves to the same whole-hearted  extent to the great task that (which) lies ahead.
 As planes and  ships and guns and shells are produced, your Government, with its defense experts,  can then determine how best to use them  to defend this hemisphere. The decision  as to how much shall be sent abroad and how much shall remain at home must be  made on the basis of our overall military necessities.
 We must be the  great arsenal of democracy. For us this is an emergency as serious as war itself.  We must apply ourselves to our task with the same resolution, the same sense  of urgency, the same spirit of patriotism and sacrifice as we would show were  we at war.
 We have furnished  the British great material support and we  will furnish far more in the future. 
 There will be no "bottlenecks" in our determination to aid Great Britain.  No dictator, no combination of dictators,  will weaken that determination by threats of how they will construe that determination.
 The British have  received invaluable military support from the heroic Greek army and from the  forces of all the governments in exile. Their strength is growing. It is the  strength of men and women who value their freedom more highly than they value  their lives.
 I believe that  the Axis powers are not going to win this war. I base that belief on the latest  and best of information.
 We have no excuse  for defeatism. We have every good reason for hope -- hope for peace, yes, and  hope for the defense of our civilization and for the building of a better civilization  in the future.
 I have the profound  conviction that the American people are now determined to put forth a mightier  effort than they have ever yet made to increase our production of all the implements  of defense, to meet the threat to our democratic faith.
 As President of  the United States I call for that national effort. I call for it in the name  of this nation which we love and honor and  which we are privileged and proud  to serve. I call upon our people with absolute confidence that our common cause  will greatly succeed.