The World at War (film)

[1] The documentary opens with visuals of the attack on Pearl Harbor and its immediate aftermath.

It then traces the previous decade of American involvement in the war, including Kuhn's address at the German-American Bund, speeches by isolationist U.S.

Senators Nye and Wheeler, Japan's invasion of China, Italy's war on Ethiopia, Hitler's Anschluss, the Spanish Civil War, the Munich Agreement, the rape of Czechoslovakia, and the invasion of Poland.

[1] It was a precursor to the better known six-part Why We Fight propaganda film series directed by Frank Capra.

This article about a documentary film on World War II is a stub.