in January 1941 On May 10, 1940, after a long night and day spent discussing the
German invasion of the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg that had ended the so-called "
Phoney War," Roosevelt urged a tired Hopkins to stay for dinner and then the night in a second-floor White House bedroom. Hopkins would live out of the bedroom for the next three-and-a-half years. On December 7, 1941, at 1:40 pm, Hopkins was in the Oval Study, in the
White House, having lunch with President Roosevelt, when Roosevelt received the first report that
Pearl Harbor had been attacked via phone from Secretary of the Navy
Frank Knox. Initially, Hopkins was skeptical of the news until Chief of Naval Operations Adm.
Harold Rainsford Stark called a few minutes later to confirm Pearl Harbor had in fact been attacked. and British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill aboard the British battleship on August 10, 1941 During the war years, Hopkins acted as Roosevelt's chief emissary to British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill. In January 1941, Roosevelt dispatched Hopkins to assess Britain's determination and situation. Churchill escorted the important visitor all over the United Kingdom. Before he returned, at a small dinner party in the North British Hotel,
Glasgow, Hopkins rose to propose a toast: "I suppose you wish to know what I am going to say to President Roosevelt on my return. Well I am going to quote to you one verse from the Book of Ruth ... 'Whither thou goest, I will go and where thou lodgest I will lodge, thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God.'" Hopkins became the administrator of the
Lend-Lease program, under which the United States gave to Britain and Soviet Union,
China, and other
Allied nations food, oil, and
materiel including warships, warplanes and weaponry. Repayment was primarily in the form of Allied military action against the enemy, as well as leases on army and naval bases in Allied territory used by American forces. in
Moscow, July 1941 Hopkins had a major voice in policy for the vast $50 billion Lend-Lease program, especially regarding supplies, first for Britain and then, upon the German invasion, the Soviets. He went to Moscow in July 1941 to make personal contact with
Joseph Stalin. Hopkins recommended and Roosevelt accepted the inclusion of the
Soviets in Lend Lease. Hopkins made Lend Lease decisions in terms of Roosevelt's broad foreign policy goals. He accompanied Churchill to the
Atlantic Conference. Hopkins promoted an aggressive war against Germany and successfully urged Roosevelt to use the Navy to protect convoys headed for Britain before the US had entered the war in December 1941. Roosevelt brought him along as advisor to his meetings with Churchill and Stalin at
Cairo,
Tehran,
Casablanca in 1942–43, and
Yalta in 1945. He was a firm supporter of
China, which received Lend-Lease aid for its military and air force. Hopkins wielded more diplomatic power than the entire
State Department. Hopkins helped identify and sponsor numerous potential leaders, including
Dwight D. Eisenhower. He continued to live in the White House and saw the President more often than any other advisor. In mid-1943, Hopkins faced a barrage of criticism from Republicans and the press that he had abused his position for personal profit. One Representative asserted that British media tycoon
Lord Beaverbrook had given Hopkins's wife, Louise, $500,000 worth of emeralds, which Louise denied. Newspapers ran stories detailing sumptuous dinners that Hopkins attended while he was making public calls for sacrifice. Hopkins briefly considered suing the
Chicago Tribune for libel after a story that compared him to
Grigory Rasputin, the famous courtier of Tsar
Nicholas II of Russia, but he was dissuaded by Roosevelt. 's portrait of Hopkins appeared on the cover of
Time magazine (January 22, 1945) as the Roosevelt administration began its fourth term. Although Hopkins's health was steadily declining, Roosevelt sent him on additional trips to Europe in 1945. Hopkins attended the
Yalta Conference in February 1945. He tried to resign after Roosevelt died, but President
Harry S. Truman sent Hopkins on one more mission to Moscow. Hopkins met with Stalin in late May to secure reassurances on
Soviet involvement in the Pacific theater and to arrange concessions on the Soviet
sphere of influence in
postwar Poland. Hopkins had three sons who served in the armed forces during the war: Robert, David and Stephen. Stephen was killed in action while he was serving in the Marine Corps. ==Relations with the Soviet Union==