Just four days after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, with Americans still reeling with grief and anger, the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler of Germany delivered yet another surprise by declaring war on the United States. Fascist Italy, bound by an Axis pact signed in 1940, also declared war on America.
On December 11, 1941, Roosevelt sent a message to Congress asking once again for a declaration of war. “The forces endeavoring to enslave the entire world now are moving toward this hemisphere,” wrote Roosevelt. “Rapid and united effort by all of the peoples of the world who are determined to remain free will insure [sic] a world victory of the forces of justice and of righteousness over the forces of savagery and of barbarism.”
This time there were absolutely no dissenters. In the House, Rankin chose to vote “present” instead of “nay,” making the vote 393 to 0.
-11. World War II - Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania
On June 3, 1942, Roosevelt signed three final declarations war on the remaining Axis powers. Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania each had their own reasons for allying with Germany in 1940. Bulgaria had territorial disputes with Yugoslavia and Greece and thought Germany could provide some muscle. Hungary was afraid of being swallowed up by the Soviet Union. And Romania was ruled by fascists and antisemites who sided with the Nazis.
In his letter to Congress, Roosevelt wrote, “I realize that the three Governments took this action [declaring war on the United States] not upon their own initiative or in response to the wishes of their own peoples but as the instruments of Hitler.”
These three declarations of war during World War II were the last ever passed by the United States Congress. All ensuing wars—the Korean War, the War in Vietnam, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq—were either initiated by a congressional “authorization of use of military force” (AUMF), or in the case of Korea, not authorized by Congress at all.