London — It was October 1940, Europe was being overrun by the Nazis, and Britain stood alone against a relentless German bombing campaign. Reporting it all over the radio waves to the American public, from his office across from the BBC, was legendary CBS News correspondent Edward R Murrow.
Murrow’s reports were broadcast from the BBC studios, and they brought the war directly into American homes.At the start of World War II, America was officially neutral. As CBS News contributor Simon Bates explains, Murrow’s broadcasts are believed to have played a large part in shifting U.S. public opinion in favor of joining the conflict in support of the British.
There was a sizable isolationist movement in the U.S., and it accused Murrow and others of acting as a tool of the British government — and of not telling Americans the whole truth. You might call it a very early accusation of “fake news.”Memories still vivid for D-Day veterans 75 years laterIn 1939, Murrow explained the rules under which he was operating in a series of wartime memos, recently unearthed by the BBC.”We are not permitted to divulge military information calculated to be of value to a possible enemy,” he wrote. “Within these limits we are to have freedom of expression… there are certain matters of a military nature which we shall not be permitted to discuss; it does not mean that anyone is telling us what to say.”But the attacks on his integrity from back home irritated Murrow, and on Oct. 2, 1940, Roger Eckersley, the Head of the BBC’s American Liaison Section, wrote a memo to his bosses with a bold proposal from the CBS News correspondent:”Murrow tells me that there is a large body of opinion among American listeners that there is still a lot of unnecessary censorship in regard to the news and that they never know whether they are really hearing the truth or not. He wants to offset this once and for all and has put up a suggestion to me of doing a completely uncensored talk… he would not broadcast it if a line was altered… In my opinion there is something in it if it makes the American public realize that censorship here is done on really reasonable grounds,” wrote Eckersley.The idea certainly came as a shock to the censors at Britain’s Ministry of Information, which stopped the proposed Murrow broadcast. Murrow was furious, saying that the bureaucrat’s memo informing him of the decision would “occupy a privileged position in my file of documents reflecting the prostitution of the English language in the service of compromise and obscurity. It really is a classic and I am grateful for it… and I thought there was a shortage of paper.”Eckersley wrote back to Murrow: