81A-3-385
Wilson's failure haunted F.D.R. When writing speeches, he often glanced at Wilson's portrait, which he'd had installed in the Cabinet Room. His efforts to escape Wilson's fate began even before the U.S. entered the war. As early as the fall of 1937, F.D.R. began hammering relentlessly on one theme. If Hitler's Germany and Tojo's Japan were allowed to rampage unchecked across Europe and Asia, America would eventually be in danger. The implication was clear. If the U.S. went to war again, it would be a war of necessity, not choice not a war to remake the world but a war to protect the U.S.
At first, that proved a hard sell. Most Americans still believed they were safe behind their Atlantic and Pacific moats. But in 1940, when the Nazis overran France, public opinion began to shift, and by the summer of 1941, with Britain under massive assault and German submarines sinking American ships, key advisers told F.D.R. that he could pressure Congress into declaring war. Yet in his gut, Roosevelt felt the timing wasn't right. He feared that unless he somehow showed Americans that the Axis powers were a threat not just to Britain and France and not even just to American ships but also to Americans themselves they would come to see World War II as philanthropy, not self-defense. And when the postwar world did not live up to their hopes, they would turn inward again. On Dec. 7, 1941, Japan solved F.D.R.'s problem by turning Pearl Harbor into an inferno. "Franklin," Eleanor commented, "was, in a way, more serene than he had appeared in a long time."
A. ¾îÈÖ
haunt »ý°¢ µûÀ§°¡ ²÷ÀÓ¾øÀÌ ºÙ¾î ´Ù´Ï´Ù, ±«·ÓÈ÷´Ù, À¯·ÉÀÌ ³ª¿À´Ù.
glance Èú²ý º¸´Ù, ìéÜ(ÀϺ°)ÇÏ´Ù. portrait ÃÊ»óÈ. install ¼³Ä¡ÇÏ´Ù.
the Cabinet Room ÊÈÖö(°¢·á) ȸÀǽÇ. relentlessly °¡Â÷¾øÀÌ, ¹«ÀÚºñÇϰÔ.
theme ÁÖÁ¦. rampage ¹ÌÄ£ µíÀÌ ³¯¶Ù´Ù. unchecked îÁò(ÀúÁö)µÇÁö ¾Ê°í.
eventually °á±¹¿¡´Â. implication ùßëò(ÇÔÀÇ), ¾Ï½Ã. a hard sell ÆÈ±â Èûµç ¹°°Ç.
moat [¿ÜÀû¿¡ ´ëºñÇÏ¿© àò(¼º)ÁÖº¯¿¡ ¸¸µç] û½(È£), ú§í®(ÇØÀÚ).
over-run ħ·«ÇÏ´Ù, Ï÷Øþ(±Ë¸ê)½ÃŰ´Ù. shift ¿Å±â´Ù, º¯ÈÇÏ´Ù.
massive ´ë±Ô¸ðÀÇ, À°ÁßÇÑ. assault ØíÍô(¸Í°ø), Ëã©(°½À). submarine Àá¼öÇÔ.
declare à¾øÖ(¼±Æ÷)ÇÏ´Ù. gut (¹°°ÇÀÇ) ¼Ó, âÀÚ, ¿ë±â, ²ö±â.
in his gut Ò®ãý(³»½É)¿¡´Â. the Axis powers õÒõîÏÐ(ÃßÃà±¹)[Á¦ 2Â÷ ´ëÀü ¶§ÀÇ µ¶ÀÏ, ÀϺ», ÀÌÅ»¸®¾Æ]. philanthropy ÀÚ¼±, ÚÏäñ(¹Ú¾Ö).
Pearl Harbor ÇÏ¿ÍÀÌÀÇ òØñÁؽ(ÁøÁÖ¸¸). cf. harbor Ç×±¸. inferno Áö¿Á.
Eleanor ·çÁƮ´ëÅë·É ºÎÀÎ. serene ¸¶À½ÀÌ Â÷ºÐÇÑ, Æò¿ÂÇÑ.
81A-4-386
But F.D.R. was still not free from his labyrinth. It was Japan that had hit the U.S., not Germany, and he still suspected there were limits to the costs that the American people would bear, especially in Europe. He initially hoped the U.S. could avoid land fighting in Europe altogether and battle Hitler only in the air and at sea. Even after abandoning that idea, F.D.R. and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill delayed an Allied invasion of France until 1944. The result was that for almost three years, Soviet ground troops faced the Nazi meat grinder largely alone. F.D.R. was not unhappy about that. Yet there were consequences. By the time American boys stormed the beaches at Normandy, the Red Army was pushing through Eastern Europe toward Berlin.
So when Roosevelt began discussing the shape of the postwar world with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and Churchill, first in Tehran in November 1943 and then in Yalta in February 1945, it was already becoming clear that Eastern Europe would probably fall under Moscow's thumb. He and Churchill got Stalin to promise that all nations would have the right to choose their own postwar governments, but those lovely words meant little with Soviet tanks squatting on Polish soil.
Roosevelt knew there was not much he could do about this, and he didn't want to alienate Stalin, whose help he thought he would need for a future invasion of Japan. But he worried that when Americans became aware of the sphere of influence that Moscow was establishing in Eastern Europe, they would react with bitter disillusionment, as they had after World War I. Once Hitler and Tojo were vanquished, Americans might turn inward again.
A. ¾îÈÖ
labyrinth Ú»ÖØ(¹Ì·Î). suspect »ý°¢ÇÏ´Ù, ÀǽÉÇÏ´Ù. initially Ãʱ⿡´Â.
land fighting À°ÁöÀüÅõ. delay Áö¿¬½ÃŰ´Ù.
Allied invasion of France µ¿¸Í±ºÀÇ ÇÁ¶û½º ħ°ø. ground troops ò¢ß¾ÏÚ(Áö»ó±º).
meat grinder °í±â ½á´Â ±â°è. the Nazi meat grinder ³ªÄ¡ÀÇ Ê¦Íð(°¡°ø)ÇÑ ±º´ë.
the Red Army îåÏÚ(Àû±º)[¼Ò·Ã±º]. thumb ¾öÁö¼Õ°¡¶ô.
fall under Moscow's thumb ¼Ò·ÃÀÇ Áö¹è¸¦ ¹Þ°Ô µÇ´Ù.
squat ¿õÅ©¸®´Ù, ¹«´ÜÈ÷ Á¡·ÉÇÏ´Ù. alienate ¼Ò¿Ü½ÃŰ´Ù, ¸Ö¸®ÇÏ´Ù.
sphere ¹üÀ§, ¿µ¿ª. disillusionment ȯ¸ê. vanquish Á¤º¹ÇÏ´Ù, Ãĺμö´Ù.
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