by Walter Reid
 Hopkins, Harry Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11
   Churchill, approval from Ref1
   Churchill and Ref1, Ref2
   favourable report from Ref1
   formal letter of authorisation for Ref1
   honoured place for Ref1
   Placentia Bay conference Ref1, Ref2
   Quebec conference (September 1944) Ref1
   Teheran conference (Nov.–Dec. 1943) Ref1
   Washington conference (June 1942) Ref1, Ref2
   Yalta conference (February 1945) Ref1, Ref2
   Hore-Belisha, Lord Leslie Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Horrocks, Sir Brian G. Ref1
   House, Colonel Edward M. Ref1
   Howard, Sir Michael Ref1
   Hull, Cordell Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10
   Churchill’s perspective on Ref1, Ref2
   indignation about attack on St Pierre and Miquelon Ref1
   Placentia Bay conference Ref1, Ref2
   replacement of Ref1
   spheres of influence, attitude to ideas on Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   support for Britain, lack of sympathy for Ref1, Ref2
   Husky (landings in Sicily 1943) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   Ickes, Harold L. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Imperial Defence, Committee for Ref1
   India
   Cripps mission to Ref1, Ref2
   Japan and Ref1
   Ingersoll, Ralph Ref1, Ref2
   Inönü, Mustafa Ismet, President of Turkey Ref1, Ref2
   intelligence matters, knowledge of Ref1, Ref2
   invasion, expectation of Ref1, Ref2
   Iraq Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   Iron Curtain, perception of Ref1
   Ironside, Field Marshall William E., Lord Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Irvine, David Ref1
   Ismay, Major-General Hastings (‘Pug’) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10
   command, machinery of Ref1
   France, battle for Ref1, Ref2
   Middle East changes Ref1, Ref2
   Italy Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11, Ref12
   concessions to Ref1
   German armies in, surrender of Ref1
   Quebec conferences, discussions concerning Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   support for campaign in Ref1, Ref2
   Teheran conference, discussions concerning Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   vassal state to Germany Ref1
   weakness of Ref1, Ref2
   see also Husky; Shingle
   Jacob, Colonel Ian (later Major-General) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Japan Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Anglo-Japanese alliance Ref1
   attacks on China Ref1
   central control, lack of Ref1
   India and Ref1
   offensive against Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Soviet Union and Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   surrender of Ref1
   surrender of Singapore and Malaya to Ref1
   Jellicoe, Admiral John Rushworth, Earl Ref1
   Jellicoe, Major the Earl Ref1
   Jenkins, Roy (later Lord Jenkins) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Jinnah, Muhammad Ali Ref1
   Jodl, General Alfred Ref1
   Johnson, Lyndon B. Ref1, Ref2
   Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   judgement, criticism of Ref1
   Jupiter (planned invasion of Norway) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Kasserine Pass, battle of the Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Kennan, George F. Ref1
   Kennedy, General Sir John Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Kennedy, Joseph Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Kesselring, General Albert Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Keyes, Sir Roger Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Keynes, John Maynard Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   King, Admiral Ernest J. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11, Ref12
   King, W.L. Mackenzie Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   Kitchener, Field Marshall H. Herbert, Lord Ref1, Ref2
   Knox, Frank Ref1, Ref2
   Koniev, Marshall Ivan Stepanovich Ref1
   Korysis, Prime Minister Alexander Ref1
   La Guardia, Fiorello Ref1
   Lascelles, Sir Thomas (‘Tommy’) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Lausanne Conference (1932) Ref1
   Laval, Pierre Ref1, Ref2
   League of Nations Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Leahy, Admiral William D. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   Leathers, Frederick, Lord Ref1
   Lebanon Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Lebrun, Albert Ref1, Ref2
   Leclerc, General Jacques-Philippe Ref1
   Lee, General Robert E. Ref1
   Leeper, Reginald Ref1
   Leese, General Sir Oliver Ref1
   Léger, Alexis Ref1
   lend-lease
   arrangements with US, negotiations on Ref1
   hostility in US to Ref1, Ref2
   Liddell Hart, Basil Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Lindbergh, Charles Ref1
   Lindemann, Professor Frederick (later Lord Cherwell) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   Lindsay, Sir Robert Ref1
   Linlithgow, Victor Hope, Marquess of Ref1, Ref2
   Little, Admiral Sir Charles (‘Tiny’) Ref1
   Lloyd, Lord George Ref1
   Lloyd George, David Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10
   Locker-Lampson, Commander Oliver Ref1
   Longmore, Sir Arthur Ref1
   Lothian, Philip Kerr, Lord Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Luce, Henry Ref1
   Lukacs, John Ref1
   Lyttelton, Oliver Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Macarthur, General Douglas Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   MacDonald, Malcolm Ref1
   MacDonald, Ramsay Ref1, Ref2
   Maclean, Fitzroy Ref1
   Macmillan, Harold Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   Casablanca conference Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Churchill’s disposition towards Ref1, Ref2
   Placentia Bay conference Ref1
   political landscape (1940) for Ref1
   Suez Crisis (1956) Ref1
   Yalta conference (February 1945) Ref1
   Madagascar Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Malta Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Manchester Guardian Ref1
   Mander, Geoffrey Ref1, Ref2
   Mareth Line Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Margesson, Henry David Reginald (later Viscount Margesson) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Marlborough, ‘Sunny,’ Duke of Ref1
   Marrakech, recuperation and de Gaulle Ref1
   Marshall, General George C. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   alliance, teething troubles in Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   American Chief of Staff Ref1
   anti-Britishness, criticism of Ref1
   Anvil and Vienna alternative Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   British strength in North West Africa, surprise at Ref1
   Casablanca conference (January 1943) Ref1, Ref2
   Italy and Overlord Ref1, Ref2
   King’s view of Ref1
   Placentia Bay conference Ref1, Ref2
   Potsdam conference (August 1945) Ref1
   strategic ability Ref1, Ref2
   strategic planning Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Teheran conference (Nov.–Dec. 1943) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Washington conference (June 1942) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   Washington conference (May 1943) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Mary of Teck, Queen-consort Ref1
   Mediterranean Strategy Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9
   Menzies, Robert Ref1, Ref2
   Menzies, Sir Stewart Ref1, Ref2
   Mers-el-Kébir Ref1, Ref2
   terrible decision on Ref1
>   Mersa Matruh Ref1, Ref2
   Metaxas, General Ioannis Ref1
   military command structures, improvement of Ref1
   military imagination, concerns on limitations of Ref1
   military operations
   Anvil (invasion of South of France, 1944) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Battleaxe (attempt at Cyrenaica, 1941) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Bolero (US forces in Britain, build up of, 1943–4) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Brevity (relief of Tobruk, attempt at, 1941) Ref1
   Compass (O’Connor’s operation in Western Desert, 1940) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Crusader (Eighth Army offensive in North Africa, 1941–2) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Diadem (Allied attack on Rome, 1944) Ref1
   Dragoon see Anvil
   Gynmast see Torch
   Husky (landings in Sicily, 1943) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   Jupiter (planned invasion of Norway) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Overlord (invasion of North-west Europe, 1944) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11, Ref12, Ref13, Ref14, Ref15, Ref16, Ref17, Ref18, Ref19, Ref20, Ref21
   Roundup (contemplated invasion of Europe, 1943) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Rutter (Dieppe raid, 1942) Ref1
   Shingle (Allied landings at Anzio, 1944) Ref1
   Sledgehammer (contemplated landing in Europe, 1942) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Torch (Anglo-American landings in North Africa, 1942) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9
   Mollet, Guy Ref1
   Molotov, Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   Monnet, Jean Ref1, Ref2
   Montgomery, General (later Field-Marshall) Bernard L. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   El-Alamein Ref1, Ref2
   allied relations, strains in Ref1, Ref2
   approach of, in tune with Churchill Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   breakout from Normandy, allies at loggerheads Ref1, Ref2
   Brooke’s opinion of Ref1
   Italy, attitude to campaign in Ref1
   Mareth Line, breaking of Ref1
   Notes on Command in Western Europe Ref1
   operations planned for 1944 Ref1
   Rommel and Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Teheran conference (Nov.-Dec., 1943), discussions about Ref1, Ref2
   Torch commander Ref1
   Wadi Akarit, success at Ref1
   Teheran conference (Nov.–Dec. 1943) Ref1
   Yalta conference (February, 1945) Ref1
   Morgan, Lieutenant-General Frederick Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Morgenthau Jr, Henry Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Morning Post Ref1, Ref2
   Morton, Major Desmond Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Moscow
   conference in (August 1942) Ref1
   meeting with Stalin in (October 1944) Ref1
   Moulin, Jean Ref1
   Mountbatten, Lord Louis F.A.V.N. (later Earl Mountbatten of Burma) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   Munitions Assignment Board Ref1
   Murphy, Bob Ref1
   Muselier, Vice-Admiral Émile Henri Ref1, Ref2
   Mussolini, Benito Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11
   capture and execution of Ref1
   Fascist government at Lake Garda Ref1
   My Early Life (Churchill, W.S.) Ref1
   Napoleon Buonaparte Ref1, Ref2
   ‘Naughty Document’ on Balkan interests Ref1
   naval leadership Ref1
   see also Alexander, A.V.; Cunningham, A.B.; Mountbatten
   Neame, Lieutenant-General Philip Ref1
   Nelson, Admiral Horatio Ref1
   New York Herald Tribune Ref1, Ref2
   Newall, Air Chief Marshall Sir Cyril Ref1, Ref2
   News Chronicle Ref1
   Nicolson, Harold Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11, Ref12
   Normandy, dispute over breakout from Ref1
   Norrie, Lieutenant-General C.W.M. Ref1, Ref2
   North, Admiral Sir Dudley Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   North Africa Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Alamein Ref1
   Allied domination of Ref1
   Anglo-American landings in, Operation Torch Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   battles in, nature of Ref1
   British presence in Ref1
   Casablanca conference (January 1943), discussions at Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Churchill’s concentration on Ref1, Ref2
   continuation of war from, prospect of Ref1
   France, de Gaulle and Ref1
   Greece, precedence in planning over Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   leadership in Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Moscow conference (August 1942), discussions with Stalin at Ref1
   Rommel offensive stalled Ref1
   success in Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Washington conference (June 1942), discussions at Ref1
   Washington conferences (December–January 1941/2), discussions at Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   North-west Africa Ref1, Ref2
   Norway
   campaign for Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   see also Jupiter
   Nye, General Francis Walter Ref1
   O’Connor, General Sir Richard Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   offensive operations, Churchill as champion of Ref1
   Onassis, Aristotle Ref1
   operations see military operations
   Overlord (invasion of North-west Europe, 1944) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9
   D-Day Ref1, Ref2
   planning for Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6
   Quebec conference, planning at Ref1
   Teheran conference, planning at Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Owen, Frank Ref1
   Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Ref1
   Pacific Ref1
   reverses in theatre Ref1
   Pahlavi, Mohammad Reza, Shah of Persia Ref1
   Papandreou, Georgios Ref1
   Park, Air Vice-Marshall Keith Ref1
   Patton, General George S. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Pearl Harbor, and reaction to Ref1, Ref2
   Pearson, Drew Ref1
   Peck, John Ref1, Ref2
   Peirse, Air Marshall Sir Richard Ref1
   Pershing, General John J. Ref1
   Persia Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Pétain, Marshal Henri Philippe Omer Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7
   Peyrouton, Marcel Ref1
   Phillip, Terence Ref1
   Phillips, Admiral Tom Ref1
   Phillips, Ambassador William Ref1
   Pimm, Captain Richard Ref1, Ref2
   Placentia Bay summit Ref1, Ref2
   Poland Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   cost of war for Ref1
   post-war future for Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Potsdam discussions on Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Yalta discussions on Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Ponting, Clive Ref1
   Portal, Air Chief Marshall Sir Charles F.A. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   post-war arrangements
   ‘Percentages Agreement’ and spheres of influence Ref1
   Poland, post-war future for Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   Roosevelt’s interest in shaping post-war world Ref1
   spheres of influence Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   see also Potsdam conference; Quebec conference (September 1944); Yalta conference
   Potsdam conference (July–August 1945) Ref1
   Pound, Admiral A. Dudley Pickman Rogers Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8, Ref9, Ref10, Ref11
   Pownall, Henry Ref1
   Prytz, Bjorn Ref1
   Quebec conference (August 1943) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Quebec conference (September 1944) Ref1
   Rashid Ali, Prime Minister of Iraq Ref1
   Reag
an, Ronald Ref1
   Rees, Major Goronwy Ref1
   Reith, John C.W., Baron Reith of Stonehaven Ref1
   Reod, Mrs Helen O.M. Ref1
   Reves, Emery and Wendy Ref1
   Reynaud, Paul Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   Ribbentrop, Joachim von Ref1
   Richie, Major-General Neil Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4
   rivals for leadership Ref1
   River Plate, battle of the Ref1
   Robertson, Sir William Robert (CIGS, 1915–18) Ref1, Ref2
   Rommel, Field-Marshall Erwin Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5, Ref6, Ref7, Ref8
   complaints about equipment shortages Ref1
   Egypt and advance of Ref1
   Egypt and advances in North Africa Ref1
   halting of Ref1
   in North Africa, defensive brief Ref1
   Roosevelt, Anna Ref1
   Roosevelt, Eleanor Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Roosevelt, Elliot Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Roosevelt, Franklin D. Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   Aegean operations Ref1, Ref2, Ref3, Ref4, Ref5
   allied discussions, lack of consensus in Ref1
   ambivalence towards Britain Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Anzio landing, approval of Ref1
   appeal for destroyers to, dismissal of Ref1
   Arcadia Conference, Washington (December 1941/January 1942) Ref1, Ref2
   Atlantic conference, Placentia Bay (August 1941) Ref1
   Casablanca conference Ref1, Ref2
   Churchill, British politics and Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Churchill’s affection for Ref1
   Churchill’s lend-lease appeal (December 1940) to Ref1
   colonies (particularly British and French), proposals for Ref1, Ref2
   and de Gaulle Ref1, Ref2
   and de Gaulle, attitude towards Ref1
   destroyers for bases deal Ref1
   election victory (1940) Ref1
   election victory (1944) Ref1
   Europe, attitude towards operations in Ref1
   Europe after D-Day Ref1
   ‘exchange of views’, Placentia Bay dismissed as Ref1
   flirtatiousness Ref1
   foreign wars, attitude to Ref1
   France, pleas for help in battle for Ref1
   French dimension Ref1
   Greek situation (December 1944) Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Hopkins mission to Britain Ref1
   initiatives and retractions, record of Ref1
   lend-lease negotiations Ref1
   Olympian leader Ref1
   Pacific theatre, setbacks in Ref1
   Pearl Harbor Ref1, Ref2, Ref3
   Placentia Bay meeting with Churchill Ref1
   political pragmatism of Ref1
   post-war world, interest in shaping Ref1
   Quebec conference (August 1943) Ref1
   Quebec conference (September 1944) Ref1, Ref2
   race issues for Ref1
   Russian expansionism, failure to recognize Ref1
   sickness and death Ref1
   spheres of influence, post-war arrangements on Ref1, Ref2, Ref3