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P**R
Gr8 book
Interesting
B**Y
Five Stars
an excellent well produced book
J**.
A good starting point to grasp 👊 this period
The populist 'Guilty Men' and Mr Churchills own review of the period have distorted the presentation of the series of events that led to WW2. Upon investigation the idea that a more bellicose approach would have been more effective or that the UK could have prevented the sudeten crisis by force is shown across multiple documents to be inaccurate. Well worth a read.
S**R
Four Stars
A USEFUL BOOK TO STUDY FOR MY RECENT STUDY COURSE.
D**T
the limits of revisionism
This is a strange book. It seeks to `readdress' the image of Chamberlain, and in doing so, relocate the word `appeasement' into a more honorable and, perculiarly British, tradition of foreign policy. Yet furthermore, it seeks to cast light on the failure of subsequent British policy to go to war, and in doing so, to create the context in which the British Empire would be lost, and the the rest of the century handed over to the Manichean struggle between the Us and the USSR. Whle it partly succeeds on the first question, it evidently fails on the second, and in doing so casts doubt on the whole purpose the book is seeking to address.It is the role of the professional historian to create, wherever possible, the context in which decisions were TAKEN AT THE TIME. In this sense, Charmley's work is well written, well researched, and utterly plausible in setting up the expectations the British elite had of a revisionist power such as Germany, and the need to rework the absurdities of the post first world war European system. But to then cast a judegement on those decisions in the wider context of what the historian knows of the period itself, is actually a responsibility of scholarship - a moral judgement of our time. It is here that I cannot fathom or understand Charmley's purpose.To goad Chamberlain with the question `why die for Danzig?' is one thing, to goad a contemporary audience with it, however, is quite another. Even at the time, early 1939, the issues of Britain's guarantee to Poland were perceived not just as a stake in Poland, but as a wider statement of final resistance against Nazi aggression, the growing realisation that Hitler wanted ALL of Europe. Appeasement failed here because it was in fact deployed against Germany and Hitler, as opposed to the US or France, and then `modified' too late to have any effect against a regime that had PLANNED for war. Chamberlain to his credit recognised this failure, even if he shrank from drawing the obvious conclusion that war was unavoidable.Bewilderingly, Charmley insinuates a narrow counter factual at this stage with the concluding remark that `the venom of [chamberlain's] opponents pursued him long, but his was the only policy which offered any hope of avoiding war and of saving both lives and the British Empire' (212). How his policy could have avoided a war that Hitler desired and actually required is not addressed, unless of course, the subtext of Charmley's own view is that a separate peace with Hitler ought to have been estalished under German guarantees. Was that really Chamberlain's policy? Peace at ANY price?Hardly - either in 1939, nor indeed in the more perilous moments of May 1940, when after hesitation, Chamberlain threw his weight behind Churchill in a War Cabinet vote against continuing diplomatic feelers to Italy on the eve of the French collapse. To imply he did is an odd way of seeking to save his reputation. How lives could have been saved and the `Empire' preserved on the basis of a deal with Hitler is an intersting puzzle, rendered pointless by the overwhelming evidence that no deals with Hitler were worth anything at all. But this puizzle is seemingly on Charmely's mind, the old High Tory cant that saw Facists as better than `reds', and not on Chamberlain's. In his preface, Charmley talks of piety. Yet to suggest that the `results of the second world war were not commensurate with the sacrifices made' is shockingly niave and profoundly conceited.ps I have since re-read this, especially after reading Robert's biography on Halifax. With the exception of the preface and the last chapter, it is good but utterly wrong: and what is astounding still (and even more so on the second read) is almost the personal anger Charmley has for Churchill, a visceral hatred that marrs his judgement completely.
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