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to carry on this show of friendship when you have betrayed everything that was basic? Certainly I had counted him a friend. I liked him. He was an agreeable companion and I thought well of him, but he had betrayed everything upon which any semblance of friendship was based. How could a man so insult the integrity of another man as to go through the pretense of shaking hands, which is a pledge of good faith and honor.”

Apparently Hull felt much the same way about Nomura, that he was more than a clever negotiator. Hull has always deeply believed, though I don't know what the facts will show, that Nomura knew all the time that this Japanese attack was planned. Of course, Nomura vowed that he didn't, but I know that Hull believed that he did know. “He sat there across the table from me and knew.”

In the latter part of 1941 more and more of the President's attention and time was taken up with matters that had to do with the European war, with his dealings with the British, and with his tinking and discussing methods by which the United States could give help and aid to the British, without being involved in the war. Hany of these matters which he had to consider were, of course, very close to the edge of what can't be done, either legally or practically. But having an inventive mind and a great deal of enthusiasm, he tended to think far ahead and to think of





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