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which might prove necessary again in a war in which the main production centers
were undergoing destruction.

It is also true that we showed ourselves more

reluctant than the Russians to accept great losses of mena fact easily
explained, however, by our ability to spend the costs and time necessary to

substitute machines for men.
While it is obviously impossible to predict what punishment we could take
or what our fighting power would be after our major cities had been wipedoff
the map, one thing remains certain: there could be no more serious threat to
our policy of determent than if we were to create the impression that we "could

not take it,"

The consequences of Hitler's failure to understand what the

British could take are still fresh in our memory.

Nothing in the last war sug-=

gests that the American people would shrink from “anysacrifices which were

necessary to achieve victory.

One thing this eotntry apparently "could not take"

is the idea of accepting ultimate defeat,

If anything needs to be emphasized

for the sake of peace, it is this.
Assuming that neither country could expect to defeat the other by means of
an atomic blitz campaign and the spectacular methods of surprise attack and
sabotage which might accompany it, the chances of winning a protracted war with
this country migkt decide what course the Soviet leaders would pursue.

It seems

hardly doubtful that the advantages which the Soviet Union was found to possess
would lose much of their weight in a long war and that one advantage on our side
might at least balance them.
position of this country.

It consists in the more favorable geographical

When it comes to warding off invasion or to invading

enemy territory, the insular position of this country would
its old defensive glory.

reassert itself in

The Soviet Union would be severely handicapped if she

attempted to breach the defenses of this country and sought to penetrate into
American territory.

Airborne invasion-—-possibly across the polar regions-—or

amphibious operations across the oceans are under no circumstances an easy

enterprise,

With her cities and production centers suffering atomic bombardment,
128

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