Ever since people began to speculate about “World War III,” its very name has implied its own inevitability.
The phrase seems to have emerged during the early 1940s, not long after people began to think of the “Great War” of 1914 as World War I—a precursor to World War II. Time magazine mused about a third war as early as November 1941, one month before the attack on Pearl Harbor and the U.S. entry into World War II. More consequentially, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill started planning for a World War III while he was still fighting the second war. And he kept on worrying about it, too.
“After he’s out office, during the summer of 1945 through 1946, he continually believes that the Soviet Union are going to start another war,” says Jonathan Walker, a military history writer and author of Operation Unthinkable_: The Third World War_.
“He always realized that there would be an eventual threat,” Walker says. But “the attitude of Britain and the U.S. were quite out of kilter in what they believed the Soviet Union was capable of,” and Churchill struggled to convince U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt of his point of view.