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| President Roosevelt announced the US is at war with the Axis Powers 1941: Germany and Italy declare war on US
 England have
 Germany and Italy have announced they are at war with the United States.
 America immediately responded by declaring war on the two Axis powers.
 Three days ago, US President Franklin Roosevelt announced America was at
 war with Japan, the third Axis power, following the surprise attack on its naval
 base at Pearl Harbor.
 Today Italian dictator, Benito Mussolini, made his declaration first - from
 the balcony over the Piazza Venezia in Rome - pledging the "powers of the pact
 of steel" were determined to win.
 Then Adolf Hitler made his announcement at the Reichstag in Berlin saying
 he had tried to avoid direct conflict with the US but, under the Tripartite
 Agreement signed on 27 September 1940, Germany was obliged to join with Italy to
 defend its ally Japan.
 "After victory has been achieved," he said. "Germany, Italy and Japan will
 continue in closest co-operation with a view to establishing a new and just
 order."
 He accused President Roosevelt of waging a campaign against Germany since
 1937, blamed him for the outbreak of war in 1939 and said he was planning to
 invade Germany in 1943.
 Over in Washington, President Roosevelt told Congress the free world must
 act quickly and decisively against the enemy.
 "The forces endeavouring to enslave the entire world now are moving towards
 this hemisphere.
 "Delay invites danger. Rapid and united efforts by all peoples of the world
 who are determined to remain free will ensure world victory for the forces of
 justice and righteousness over the forces of savagery and barbarism."
 Resolutions against Germany and Italy were passed without debate. The only
 person who did not vote for war was pacifist Congresswoman Jeannette Rankin who
 had also voted against war with Japan.
 In the Senate the vote was unanimous.
 Both Democrats and Republicans have agreed to "adjourn politics" for the
 duration of the war and focus on national defence.
 They have passed a new law which allows US servicemen to fight anywhere in
 the world.
 Following the shock of Pearl Harbor, American citizens are flocking to
 volunteer for the US Navy and Marine Corps which do not take conscripts.
 The US Army has already grown tenfold since the draft was introduced last
 year.
 British vessels are undamaged
 1975: Attack on British vessels heightens Cod War
 Artificially 1969:
 The An Icelandic gunboat has opened fire on unarmed British fishery support
 vessels in the North Atlantic Sea, it is reported.
 The violent clash left the Icelandic coastguard ship, Thor, badly damaged
 but the three British vessels involved appear to be unaffected.
 The Thor is said to have tried to arrest the British Star Aquarius and her
 sister vessel the Star Polaris as they sheltered from a force nine gale within
 Iceland's 12 mile territorial waters.
 They were taking water and supplies from the Lloydsman, an ocean going tug,
 and the practice is normal for a vessel in distress.
 The Royal Navy said Thor moved alongside the British vessels and signalled
 the Star Aquarius, an oil rig supply vessel of the Ministry of Agriculture,
 Fisheries and Food, should stop or she would shoot.
 Reports are confused about which vessel then struck the other but as the
 Thor broke away the Lloydsman surged forward to protect the Star Aquarius.
 Captain Albert MacKenzie of the Star Aquarius said the Thor approached from
 the stern and hit the support vessel, before it veered off and fired a shot from
 a range of about 100 yards.
 But Niels Sigurdsson, the Icelandic Ambassador in London, said the Thor had
 been firing in self-defence after it had been rammed by British vessels.
 The incident comes at a diplomatically sensitive time as foreign
 secretaries from both countries are attending a two-day Nato conference in
 Brussels.
 Foreign Secretary James Callaghan has criticised the incident and Einar
 Agustsson, the Icelandic Foreign Minister, said it was a very grave matter.
 Both men are due to meet and discuss the cod war which has been plunged
 into disarray following today's incident.
 Iceland has said its decision to allow British fishermen an annual 65,000
 ton catch in its territorial waters is non-negotiable.
 But Britain is demanding an annual catch of 110,000 and is hoping to broker
 an agreement somewhere between the two figures.
 Vocabulary:
 unprecedented: having no precedent or example(空前的)
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