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I
left the United States in 1943 in order to rejoin my fellow flyers of "Flight
to Arras". I traveled on board an American convoy. This convoy of thirty
ships was carrying fifty thousand of your soldiers from the United States
to North Africa. When, on waking, I went up on deck, I found myself surrounded
by this city on the move. The thirty ships carved their way powerfully
through the water. But I felt something else besides a sense of power.
This convoy conveyed to me the joy of a crusade.
Friends in America, I would like to do you
complete justice. Perhaps, someday, more or less serious disputes will
arise between us. Every nation is selfish and every nation considers its
selfishness sacred. Perhaps your feeling of power may, someday, lead you
to seize advantages for yourselves that we consider unjust to us.
Perhaps, sometime in the future, more or less violent disputes may occur
between us. If it is true that wars are won by believers, it is also true
that peace treaties are sometimes signed by businessmen. If therefore,
at some future date, I were to inwardly reproach those American businessmen,
I could never forget the high-minded war aims of your country. I shall
always bear witness in the same way to your fundamental qualities.
American mothers did not give their sons
for the pursuit of material aims. Nor did these boys accept the idea of
risking their lives for such material aims. I know - and will later tell
my countrymen - that it was a spiritual crusade that led you into the war.
I have two specific proofs of this among others. Here is the first.
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