In Against Immediate Evil, Andrew Johnstone tells the story of
how internationalist Americans worked between 1938 and 1941 to
convince the U.S. government and the American public of the need to
stem the rising global tide of fascist aggression. As war
approached, the internationalist movement attempted to arouse the
nation in order to defeat noninterventionism at home and fascism
overseas. Johnstone's examination of this movement undermines the
common belief that the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor wrenched an
isolationist United States into global armed conflict and the
struggle for international power.
Johnstone focuses on three organizations the American Committee
for Non-Participation in Japanese Aggression, the Committee to
Defend America by Aiding the Allies, and Fight For Freedom that
actively promoted a more global role for the United States based on
a conception of the "four freedoms" later made famous by FDR. The
desire to be free from fear was seen in concerns regarding America
s immediate national security. The desire to be free from want was
expressed in anxieties over the nation s future economic
prosperity. The need for freedom of speech was represented in
concerns over the potential loss of political freedoms. Finally,
the need for freedom of worship was seen in the emphasis on
religious freedoms and broader fears about the future of Western
civilization. These groups and their supporters among the public
and within the government characterized the growing global conflict
as one between two distinct worlds and in doing so, set the tone of
American foreign policy for decades to come."
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