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Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World Paperback – July 28, 2009

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 946 ratings

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Were World Wars I and II inevitable? Were they necessary wars? Or were they products of calamitous failures of judgment?

In this monumental and provocative history, Patrick Buchanan makes the case that, if not for the blunders of British statesmen– Winston Churchill first among them–the horrors of two world wars and the Holocaust might have been avoided and the British Empire might never have collapsed into ruins. Half a century of murderous oppression of scores of millions under the iron boot of Communist tyranny might never have happened, and Europe’s central role in world affairs might have been sustained for many generations.

Among the British and Churchillian errors were:
• The secret decision of a tiny cabal in the inner Cabinet in 1906 to take Britain straight to war against Germany, should she invade France
• The vengeful Treaty of Versailles that mutilated Germany, leaving her bitter, betrayed, and receptive to the appeal of Adolf Hitler
• Britain’s capitulation, at Churchill’s urging, to American pressure to sever the Anglo-Japanese alliance, insulting and isolating Japan, pushing her onto the path of militarism and conquest
• The greatest mistake in British history: the unsolicited war guarantee to Poland of March 1939, ensuring the Second World War

Certain to create controversy and spirited argument,
Churchill, Hitler, and “the Unnecessary War” is a grand and bold insight into the historic failures of judgment that ended centuries of European rule and guaranteed a future no one who lived in that vanished world could ever have envisioned.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Patrick J. Buchanan was a senior adviser to three American presidents; ran twice for the Republican presidential nomination, in 1992 and 1996; and was the Reform Party candidate in 2000. He is the author of nine other books, including the bestsellers Right from the Beginning; A Republic, Not an Empire; The Death of the West; State of Emergency; and Day of Reckoning. He is now a senior political analyst for MSNBC.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter 1
The End of “Splendid Isolation”


[T]he Queen cannot help feeling that our isolation is dangerous.1
—Queen Victoria, January 14, 1896


Isolation is much less dangerous than the danger of being dragged into wars which do not concern us.2
—Lord Salisbury, 1896


For as long as he had served the queen, Lord Salisbury had sought to keep Britain free of power blocs. “His policy was not one of isolation from Europe . . . but isolation from the Europe of alliances.”3 Britannia would rule the waves but stay out of Europe’s quarrels. Said Salisbury, “We are fish.”4


When the queen called him to form a new government for the third time in 1895, Lord Salisbury pursued his old policy of “splendid isolation.” But in the years since he and Disraeli had traveled to the Congress of Berlin in 1878, to create with Bismarck a new balance of power in Europe, their world had vanished.


In the Sino-Japanese war of 1894–95, Japan defeated China, seized Taiwan, and occupied the Liaotung Peninsula. Britain’s preeminent position in China was now history.


In the summer of 1895, London received a virtual ultimatum from secretary of state Richard Olney, demanding that Great Britain accept U.S. arbitration in a border dispute between British Guiana and Venezuela. Lord Salisbury shredded Olney’s note like an impatient tenured professor cutting up a freshman term paper. But President Cleveland demanded that Britain accept arbitration—or face the prospect of war with the United States.


The British were stunned by American enthusiasm for a war over a patch of South American jungle, and incredulous. America deployed two battleships to Britain’s forty-four.5 Yet Salisbury took the threat seriously: “A war with America . . . in the not distant future has become something more than a possibility.”6


London was jolted anew in January 1896 when the Kaiser sent a telegram of congratulations to Boer leader Paul Kruger on his capture of the Jameson raiders, who had invaded the Transvaal in a land grab concocted by Cecil Rhodes, with the connivance of Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain.


These two challenges, from a jingoistic America that was now the first economic power on earth, and from his bellicose nephew in Berlin, Wilhelm II, revealed to the future Edward VII that “his country was without a friend in the world” and “steps to end British isolation were required. . . .”7


On December 18, 1897, a Russian fleet steamed into the Chinese harbor of Port Arthur, “obliging British warships to vacate the area.”8 British jingoes “became apoplectic.”9 Lord Salisbury stood down: “I don’t think we carry enough guns to fight them and the French together.”10


In 1898, a crisis erupted in northeast Africa. Captain Jean-Baptiste Marchand, who had set off from Gabon in 1897 on a safari across the Sahara with six officers and 120 Senegalese, appeared at Fashoda in the southern Sudan, where he laid claim to the headwaters of the Nile. Sir Herbert Kitchener cruised upriver to instruct Marchand he was on imperial land. Faced with superior firepower, Marchand withdrew. Fashoda brought Britain and France to the brink of war. Paris backed down, but bitterness ran deep. Caught up in the Anglophobia was eight-year-old Charles de Gaulle.11


In 1900, the Russian challenge reappeared. After American, British, French, German, and Japanese troops had marched to the rescue of the diplomatic legation in Peking, besieged for fifty-five days by Chinese rebels called “Boxers,” Russia exploited the chaos to send a 200,000-man army into Manchuria and the Czar shifted a squadron of his Baltic fleet to Port Arthur. The British position in China was now threatened by Russia and Japan.


But what awakened Lord Salisbury to the depth of British isolation was the Boer War. When it broke out in 1899, Europeans and Americans cheered British defeats. While Joe Chamberlain might “speak of the British enjoying a ‘splendid isolation, surrounded and supported by our kinsfolk,’ the Boer War brought home the reality that, fully extended in their imperial role, the British needed to avoid conflict with the other great powers.”12


Only among America’s Anglophile elite could Victoria’s nation or Salisbury’s government find support. When Bourke Cockran, a Tammany Hall Democrat, wrote President McKinley, urging 
him to mediate and keep America’s distance from Great Britain’s “wanton acts of aggression,” the letter went to Secretary of State John Hay.13


Hay bridled at this Celtic insolence. “Mr. Cockran’s logic is especially Irish,” he wrote to a friend. “As long as I stay here no action shall be taken contrary to my conviction that the one indispensable feature of our foreign policy should be a friendly understanding with England.” Hay refused even to answer “Bourke Cockran’s fool letter to the president.”14


Hay spoke of an alliance with Britain as an “unattainable dream” and hoped for a smashing imperial victory in South Africa. “I hope if it comes to blows that England will make quick work of Uncle Paul [Kruger].”15


Entente Cordiale
So it was that as the nineteenth century came to an end Britain set out to court old rivals. The British first reached out to the Americans. Alone among Europe’s great powers, Britain sided with the United States in its 1898 war with Spain. London then settled the Alaska boundary dispute in America’s favor, renegotiated the fifty-year-old Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, and ceded to America the exclusive rights to build, operate, and fortify a canal across Panama. Then Britain withdrew her fleet from the Caribbean.


Writes British historian Correlli Barnett: “The passage of the British battlefleet from the Atlantic to the Pacific would now be by courtesy of the United States,” and, with America’s defeat of Spain, “The Philippines, Cuba and Puerto Rico, now American colonies, were gradually closed to British merchants by protective tariffs, for the benefit of their American rivals.”16


Other historians, however, hail the British initiative to terminate a century of U.S.-British enmity as “The Great Rapprochement,” and Berlin-born Yale historian Hajo Holborn regards the establishment of close Anglo-American relations as probably “by far the greatest achievement of British diplomacy in terms of world history.”17


With America appeased, Britain turned to Asia.


With a Russian army in Manchuria menacing Korea and the Czar’s warships at Port Arthur and Vladivostok, Japan needed an ally to balance off Russia’s ally, France. Germany would not do, as Kaiser Wilhelm disliked Orientals and was endlessly warning about the “Yellow Peril.” As for the Americans, their Open Door policy had proven to be bluster and bluff when Russia moved into Manchuria. That left the British, whom the Japanese admired as an island people and warrior race that had created the world’s greatest empire.


On January 30, 1902, an Anglo-Japanese treaty was signed. Each nation agreed to remain neutral should the other become embroiled in an Asian war with a single power. However, should either become involved in war with two powers, each would come to the aid of the other. Confident its treaty with Britain would checkmate Russia’s ally France, Japan in 1904 launched a surprise attack on the Russian naval squadron at Port Arthur. An enraged Czar sent his Baltic fleet to exact retribution. After a voyage of six months from the Baltic to the North Sea, down the Atlantic and around the Cape of Good Hope to the Indian Ocean, the great Russian fleet was ambushed and annihilated by Admiral Heihachiro Togo in Tshushima Strait between Korea and Japan. Only one small Russian cruiser and two destroyers made it to Vladivostok. Japan lost two torpedo boats. It was a victory for Japan to rival the sinking of the Spanish Armada and the worst defeat ever inflicted on a Western power by an Asian people.


Britain had chosen well. In 1905, the Anglo-Japanese treaty was elevated into a full alliance. Britain now turned to patching up quarrels with her European rivals. Her natural allies were Germany and the Habsburg Empire, neither of whom had designs on the British Empire. Imperial Russia, Britain’s great nineteenth-century rival, was pressing down on China, India, Afghanistan, the Turkish Straits, and the Middle East. France was Britain’s ancient enemy and imperial rival in Africa and Egypt. The nightmare of the British was a second Tilsit, where Napoleon and Czar Alexander I, meeting on a barge in the Neiman in 1807, had divided a prostrate Europe and Middle East between them. Germany was the sole European bulwark against a French-Russian dominance of Europe and drive for hegemony in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia—at the expense of the British Empire.


With Lord Salisbury’s blessing, Joe Chamberlain began to court Berlin. “England, Germany and America should collaborate: by so doing they could check Russian expansionism, calm turbulent France and guarantee world peace,” Chamberlain told future German chancellor Bernhard von Bulow.18 The Kaiser put him off. Neither he nor his advisers believed Britain could reconcile with her old nemesis France, or Russia, and must eventually come to Berlin hat-in-hand. Joe warned the Germans: Spurn Britain, and we go elsewhere.


The Kaiser let the opportunity slip and, in April 1904, learned to his astonishment that Britain and France had negotiated an entente cordiale, a cordial understanding. France yielded all claims in Egypt, and Britain agreed to support France’s preeminence in Morocco. Centuries of hostility came to an end. The quarrel over Suez was over. Fashoda was history.


The entente quickly proved its worth. After the Kaiser was persuaded to make a provocative visit to Tangier in 1905, Britain backed France at the Algeciras conference called to resolve the crisis. Germany won economic concessions in Morocco, but Berlin had solidified the Anglo-French entente. More ominous, the Tangier crisis had propelled secret talks already under way between French and British staff officers over how a British army might be ferried across the Channel to France in the event of a war with Germany.


Unknown to the Cabinet and Parliament, a tiny cabal had made a decision fateful for Britain, the empire, and the world. Under the guidance of Edward Grey, the foreign secretary from 1905 to 1916, British and French officers plotted Britain’s entry into a Franco-German war from the first shot. And these secret war plans were being formulated by Liberals voted into power in public revulsion against the Boer War on a platform of “Peace, Retrenchment, and Reform.” Writes historian Robert Massie,


[O]n January 16 [1906], without the approval of either the Prime Minister or Cabinet, secret talks between British and French staff officers began. They focussed on plans to send 100,000 British soldiers to the Continent within two weeks of an outbreak of hostilities. On January 26, when Campbell-Bannerman returned to London and was informed, he approved.19


As Churchill wrote decades later, only Lord Rosebery read the real meaning of the Anglo-French entente. “Only one voice—Rosebery’s—was raised in discord: in public ‘Far more likely to lead to War than Peace’; in private ‘Straight to War.’ ”20 While praising Rosebery’s foresight, Churchill never repudiated his own support of the entente or secret understandings: “It must not be thought that I regret the decisions which were in fact taken.”21


In August 1907, Britain entered into an Anglo-Russian convention, ending their eighty-year conflict. Czar Nicholas II accepted Britain’s dominance in southern Persia. Britain accepted Russia’s dominance in the north. Both agreed to stay out of central Persia, Afghanistan, and Tibet. The Great Game was over and the lineups completed for the great European war. In the Triple Alliance were Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy. Opposite was the Franco-Russian alliance backed by Great Britain, which was allied to Japan. Only America among the great powers remained free of entangling alliances.


“You Have a New World”
Britain had appeased America, allied with Japan, and entered an entente with France and Russia, yet its German problem remained. It had arisen in the aftermath of the Franco-Prussian war. After the French defeat at Sedan and the abdication of Napoleon III, a united Germany stretching from France to Russia and from the Baltic to the Alps had emerged as the first power in Europe. Disraeli recognized the earthshaking importance of the unification of the German states under a Prussian king.


The war represents the German revolution, a greater political event than the French revolution of the last century. . . . There is not a diplomatic tradition, which has not been swept away. You have a new world. . . . The balance of power has been entirely destroyed.22


Bismarck had engineered the wars on Denmark, Austria, and France, but he now believed his nation had nothing to gain from war. She had “hay enough for her fork.”23 Germany should not behave “like a nouveau riche who has just come into money and then offended everyone by pointing to the coins in his pocket.”24 He crafted a series of treaties to maintain a European balance of power favorable to Germany—by keeping the Austro-Hungarian Empire allied, Russia friendly, Britain neutral, and France isolated. Bismarck opposed the building of a fleet that might alarm the British. As for an overseas empire, let Britain, France, and Russia quarrel over colonies. When a colonial adventurer pressed upon him Germany’s need to enter the scramble for Africa, Bismarck replied, “Your map of Africa is very nice. But there is France, and here is Russia, and we are in the middle, and that is my map of Africa.”25


As the clamor for colonies grew, however, the Iron Chancellor would succumb and Germany would join the scramble. By 1914, Berlin boasted the world’s third largest overseas empire, encompassing German East Africa (Tanganyika), South-West Africa (Namibia), Kamerun (Cameroon), and Togoland. On the China coast, the Kaiser held Shantung Peninsula. In the western Pacific, the House of Hohenzollern held German New Guinea, German Samoa, the Bismarck Archipelago, the Marshall, Mariana, and Caroline islands, and the Northern Solomons, of which Bougainville was the largest. However, writes Holborn,


Not for a moment were Bismarck’s colonial projects intended to constitute a revision of the fundamentals of his continental policy. Least of all were they designs to undermine British naval or colonial supremacy overseas. Bismarck was frank when he told British statesmen that Germany, by the acquisition of colonies, was giving Britain new hostages, since she could not hope to defend them in an emergency.26


By 1890, Bismarck had been dismissed by the new young Kaiser, who began to make a series of blunders, the first of which was to let Bismarck’s treaty with Russia lapse. This left Russia nowhere to turn but France. By 1894, St. Petersburg had become the ally of a Paris still seething over the loss of Alsace-Lorraine. France had broken free of the isolation imposed upon her by Bismarck. The Kaiser’s folly in letting the Reinsurance Treaty with Russia lapse can hardly be overstated.


While Germany was a “satiated power, so far as Europe itself was concerned, and stood to gain little from a major war on the European continent,” France and Russia were expansionist.27 Paris hungered for the return of Alsace. Russia sought hegemony over Bulgaria, domination of the Turkish Straits to keep foreign warships out of the Black Sea, and to pry away the Austrian share of a partitioned Poland.


More ominous, the Franco-Russian Alliance of 1894 stipulated that a partial mobilization by any member of the Triple Alliance—Austria, Italy, or Germany—would trigger hostilities against all three.28 As George Kennan writes in The Fateful Alliance,


A partial Austrian mobilization against Serbia, for example (and one has only to recall the events of 1914 to understand the potential significance of this circumstance) could alone become the occasion for the launching of a general European war.29

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Forum Books; First Edition (July 28, 2009)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 560 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0307405168
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0307405166
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.28 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.05 x 1.17 x 9.11 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 946 ratings

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Customers find the book engaging and worth reading. They appreciate the insightful analysis and well-documented history. Readers praise the writing quality as clear, readable, and well-written. The narrative is described as compelling and different from what they were taught in school. However, opinions differ on whether the book is truthful or not.

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101 customers mention "Readability"101 positive0 negative

Customers find the book readable and insightful. They say it's worthwhile reading and worth purchasing. The opening statement is captivating and accurate.

"In this excellent piece, Pat Buchanan makes some excellent points which conflict with the conventional wisdom about some of the most important..." Read more

"...His analysis is compelling, thought-provoking, and very convincing, and perhaps without intent gives strong evidence for the view that an excess of..." Read more

"...despite being a great admirer of Churchill, I believe this is an important book that should be read by anyone interested in this period of history...." Read more

"...tome on answering that question, but it does provide a critical piece to the puzzle, and perhaps more importantly, provides the reader with links..." Read more

97 customers mention "Knowledge"91 positive6 negative

Customers find the book a great history lesson with an interesting thesis. They appreciate the insightful analysis and well-researched content. The book is considered important for scholars and amateur historians, as it provides a thorough historical review.

"...Mr. Buchanan's most insightful analysis is at the very end of this piece...." Read more

"...His analysis is compelling, thought-provoking, and very convincing, and perhaps without intent gives strong evidence for the view that an excess of..." Read more

"...This book manages to flesh out the geopolitical complexities of dealing with Hitler giving context to diplomatic actions taken by Britain during..." Read more

"...not just a rant against Churchill - it is also an excellent history of the motivations and events that lead up to WWII...." Read more

44 customers mention "Writing quality"38 positive6 negative

Customers find the book well-written and readable. They appreciate the author's thorough research and clear presentation. The book is described as an important read for anyone interested in a new perspective on leaders, decisions, and strategies.

"...However, the author rigorously annotates his points, not just in footnotes but quotes of primary sources in the text of the book...." Read more

"...Buchanan writes clearly and engagingly...." Read more

"...Here's why I love this book: 1. The writing is superb - I found the book easy to read, and hard to put down. 2...." Read more

"Immaculately written, well researched, you get the impression Buchanan is a historian with the surgical precision he organizes and characterizes..." Read more

12 customers mention "Narrative quality"9 positive3 negative

Customers find the narrative compelling and interesting. They say it ties together various sources and presents a different perspective than taught in school. The book characterizes events and adds an interesting twist to the story of two WWI criminals who get together and blow up the world.

"...is a historian with the surgical precision he organizes and characterizes events… overall a must read. I only wish he wrote more work like this...." Read more

"...It adds an interesting twist what if WWI had not happened." Read more

"...This book is provocative, but persuasive." Read more

"...But this book will enlighten the reader because it presents a different narrative than we were taught in school and is reinforced by our media and..." Read more

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"...The best book I have found that has an realistic, accurate assessment behind the real causes of WW2 - both political and economic...." Read more

"...The authors rely on quotes of other writers, but offer little original research. Opposing views are ignored." Read more

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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2010
    In this excellent piece, Pat Buchanan makes some excellent points which conflict with the conventional wisdom about some of the most important events of the Twentieth Century. Many readers will disagree and perhaps even be offended by Buchanan's analysis. However, the author rigorously annotates his points, not just in footnotes but quotes of primary sources in the text of the book. Most readers have doubtless made up their minds about the causes of World Wars I and II. This book will, at the very least, challenge most readers to re-examine many of their opinions. While I do not accept all of Mr. Buchanan's arguments, they are worthy of respect, and can shake up one's settled beliefs.

    The first theme that Mr. Buchanan challenges is the notion that the First World War was essentially the product of German and Austrian aggression against the reluctant Allied Powers. While Austria is seen as the unwise bully that it was, Mr. Buchanan points out that in his 25 years as the German Kaiser, neither Kaiser Wilhelm or his nation had been involved in a single war. Britain, by contrast, had fought ten wars during this period including the bloody and recent Boer War. France had been involved in numerous bloody colonial wars as well. Buchanan provides copious evidence that the Kaiser was trying to avert war even at the eleventh hour, and that Britain could, and should, have averted war by simply refusing to commit to a war in continental Europe.

    Regarding this first theme, Winston Churchill comes in for savage criticism by Buchanan. Buchanan's theme is that Churchill's appetite and ardent desire for war was pivotal in causing England to guaranty Belgium's defense, which guaranty very likely made war inevitable.

    Buchanan documents in depressing detail the utter fecklessness of European diplomacy both before and after the First World War. Those who feel it necessary to take heed of the opinion of the elites of these countries would do well to study this component of the book. Buchanan documents, as have others before him, that both the First and Second World Wars are primarily the product of wretchedly incompetent management of international relations on the part of Britain, France, Germany, and others.

    Buchanan's main themes continue unto the Second World War. His main thesis is that it was Britain's guaranty to go to war if Germany attacked Poland that triggered the global war. He makes a strong case that this guaranty put the question of global war into the hands of a Polish government which immediately became intransigent once it received this guaranty. Buchanan believes that Hitler would have accepted terms over the question of Danzig and the Polish Corridor that Poland otherwise could, (and, he says, should) have found acceptable. Danzig was, after all, formerly a part of Germany until the Versailles Treaty, and its inhabitants almost to a person desired to be part of Germany. Given the facts that at the time Britain had only two battle-ready divisions, a minuscule air force, and that its Navy could not influence any German-Polish conflict in a meaningful way, Buchanan argues that the guaranty was essentially inexplicable.

    Once again, Buchanan savages Winston Churchill, who was again instrumental in causing Britain to make the guaranty that Buchanan believes triggered "the unnecessary war."

    Most readers, myself included, will not buy all of Buchanan's arguments. Regarding the fecklessness of European diplomacy, and the causes of the First World War, I think that Buchanan is on solid ground. Other researchers before Buchanan have found the First World War to have been an avoidable tragedy that the European states should have been able to avoid. Buchanan's Second World War arguments are somewhat more problematic. There is little evidence that any country anytime ever had much luck negotiating with Hitler, and it is far from clear that Britain's guaranty caused the German-Polish conflict or that its absence would have prevented it. Hitler seemed willing to invade neighboring countries on almost any pretext and with a complete disregard to ordinary Western standards of decency. Notwithstanding that fact, Buchanan makes a pretty good case that Hitler was an opportunist, and that he was not without justification in seeking return of the Sudetenland and of Bohemia. Had he stopped there, and negotiated return of Danzig without war (which Buchanan says would have happened absent the British guaranty) we might be living in a very different world. Who can say?

    Personally, I still think that Hitler was determined to fight a bloody war against Russia and persecute the Jews and other nationalities and ethnicities that he hated. Ultimately, it seems that Hitler was bound to fight such a war, but Buchanan makes some case that the world might have been better had Germany and Russia fought their war without the Western Allies being involved. Each reader must decide for him or her self. I don't accept this thesis.

    Mr. Buchanan's most insightful analysis is at the very end of this piece. He argues, as discussed above, that inept European diplomacy in which Great Powers went to war for non-vital reasons, was the cause of the World Wars. He then contrasts this with US diplomacy from World War I to the end of the Cold War. During this time American leaders refused to be easily drawn into conflicts and joined the World Wars only in their latter stages (particularly the First) thereby avoiding in significant degree, the horrendous casualties that many others suffered. Even more significantly, once America became the leading world power, American diplomacy repeatedly avoided war-starting confrontations by refusing, not without anguish, to fight wars for non-vital interests to America. Hence America's refusal to fight wars over Soviet interventions in Czechoslovakia and Hungary, or even the Cuban Missile Crisis. The contrast between the success of America in winning the Cold War without a World War (albeit with some sizable errors such as Vietnam) and European fecklessness in managing to start two world wars in 25 years, is stark. This is a truly fascinating insight which in my opinion is the major contribution of this book.

    This book is interesting, readable, and provocative. It will cause most readers to at the very least re-examine what they think about the causes of the two great wars of the Twentieth Century. For that, this one merits five stars. Highly recommended. RJB.
    55 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 13, 2008
    In studying history one must differentiate between history as a "collection of facts" and historical analysis. History as a "collection of facts" does it best to present the flow of events from as unbiased a vantage point as possible. Complete freedom from bias is of course impossible, if only due to the reason that time and space constraints in the final manuscript force historians to select the facts that they deem the most important. Historical analysis on the other hand attempts to analyze the motives and goals of historical figures with the intent of shedding light on their characters and ethical standards. By doing so it is thought that the successes or mistakes made by these figures will serve as a lesson or guide for present decision-making. Historical analysis follows the dictum (or cliché) that one must "learn from history". Historians and historical analysts have a very important (even the most important) role to play in the modern world, and their importance has skyrocketed in recent decades due to the influence of individuals who want to rewrite or "deconstruct" history in order to reconcile it with their own personal philosophy or worldview.

    This book should definitely be classified as historical analysis, for it takes a counterfactual stance as to the role of Great Britain in the two world wars of the twentieth century. Its author clearly has an axe to grind with respect to Winston Churchill, a figure who he believes was responsible for the unnecessary carnage that resulted from these wars. His analysis is compelling, thought-provoking, and very convincing, and perhaps without intent gives strong evidence for the view that an excess of veneration regarding Churchill, Hitler, Stalin and other world "leaders" encourages too much of a willingness to believe in their abilities and expertise, even though their decisions are leading the populace down a precipice. Churchill clearly has been venerated beyond rational measure, and the moral, political, and historical pedestal that he occupies needed to be knocked down. The author of this book has done this successfully, and has refrained from indulging himself in the vituperation that is characteristic of so much historical analysis of late.

    But the book also includes very interesting historical facts and tidbits that some readers may be unaware of. Some of these include:
    * Britain had an alliance with Japan before WWII and this was broken up by US demands.
    * Kaiser Wilhelm II was a grandson of Britain's Queen Victoria.
    * The Serbs referred the matter of the murder of the archduke to the International Court of Justice.
    * Churchill was "buoyant" over the possibility of the First World War.
    * Germany was not involved in any wars between 1871 and 1914, whereas Britain, Russia, Italy, Japan and the United States were.
    * Churchill mined the North Sea and imposed a starvation blockade against Germany during the First World War.
    * Woodrow Wilson believed that citizens were responsible for the acts of their government (his attitude reminds one of the philosophy of "collective guilt" that is adhered to by modern-day terrorists, who murder citizens who are "supporting" their government through taxes, etc).
    * The United States Congress refused Herbert Hoover's request for food aid to Germany after the First World War.
    * Germany signed the Treaty of Versailles under the threat that it would be invaded if it did not.
    * Churchill thought it odd that Americans participated in the First World War.
    * The German SS were launching terrorist attacks against the Austrian government before the Anschluss.
    * Lloyd George of Britain compared Hitler's `Mein Kampf' to the Magna Carta.
    * There were German officers before Munich that had planned to arrest Hitler, Himmler, Goring, and Goebbels.

    There are many more of these facts, all of them fascinating, and which all of course must be checked as to their accuracy and their legitimate historical context. The author has provided an extensive list of notes at the end of the book for the skeptical reader who demands further details. Such skepticism is proper considering the loose propaganda that is sold as history these days.

    The Second World War has been called the "people's war" and is one of the few that has been considered to be morally legitimate. This book, and a few others that have come out in recent years, has the effect, perhaps without intending to do so, of questioning this legitimacy. Considering the number of lives that were lost in both World War I and II, it is difficult to come to terms with the moral status of these wars. It makes one very uncomfortable to take a stand that those who died did so for no good reason. But to avoid future conflicts, every citizen should learn from the unintended premise of this book that an unquestioned excess of veneration for the world's leaders may result in death and destruction. We must deny the conservative premise that we respect our institutions and hierarchies, and we need to analyze their occupants with extreme skepticism. If we do not, we end up face down in a sandy or muddy battlefield, the victims of our sycophancy for world leaders, fighting a war with no sound moral foundation, and leaving these leaders and their families comfortable and alive and maybe grinning as to their ability to have manipulated us to do their evil bidding--to paraphrase Churchill: "to view us as being worms, but themselves as being glow-worms."
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  • Nayuribe Girado
    5.0 out of 5 stars Un excelente libro.
    Reviewed in Spain on January 8, 2025
    Me ha encantado como el autor hace uso de referencias bibliográficas e historias públicas y verificables para explicar como Churchill fue cambiando de opinión como quien cambiaba calzones. Un buen político y una guerra que nunca debió ser. 100 recomendado, claro que deja mal sabor luego de leerlo.
  • Truth Teller
    5.0 out of 5 stars A very good read and easy to comprehend
    Reviewed in Canada on June 18, 2018
    A very good read and easy to comprehend. One criticism is that the author wasn't hard enough of the war criminal Churchill. Churchill was a major player in World War One, try reading HIdden History: The Secret Origins of the First World War where the actions of not only Churchill but Lloyd George too. Churchill wanted war with Germany from 1933 onwards, Churchill and his Focus group were monumenal in starting the Second World War. Try reading Churchill' War by David Irving. He was instrumental in the beligerence of Czechoslovakia and receiving payments from Benes from 1934 on. Still we are getting off the topic of this excellent book. The comments and wants of Churchill are the product of a sick and twisted mind. There is mention in the book of Churchill being Chancellor of the Exchequer and being responsible for the 1926 General Strike. Twice in his political did Churchill use the Royal Navy to break strikes. He shot down striking miners on the docks in Liverpool with rifle fire and 11 years later use cannon on ships to kill strikers. The man was deranged. Hitler was condemned and quite rightly so but Churchill was as bad or even worse than Hitler in his disregard of human life as he showed starving millions of Indians in the Bengal Famine and half a million Greeks following the British Army being ejected from Greece. Neither Chamberlain or Churchill ever worked for peace prior to September 1st 1939, they discouraged a Polish representative being sent to Germany at the end of August. Stalin too was another deranged politician who murdered far more than Churchill or Hitler but he is showered with praise in this book. I'm not a National Socialist but Churchill was inspiration for any warmonger or mass murderer. He was responsible for starting the bombing of civilians sending many RAF bombing raids before Hitler responded in kind.
  • Hello You
    5.0 out of 5 stars The most important 20th Century history book
    Reviewed in France on October 4, 2019
    Finally, someone has written the real history of the 20th Century. I was going to write this book, until I read it and realised that it had already been written. Pat Buchanan was a heavyweight US politician who never quite made it to the top of his profession. As a historian, he follows the Tom Wolfe approach, keeping the intellectual content low-grade, and ramming the message home through repetition and many quotes from more academic historians. In the end, he relies on secondary sources, but a wide selection including the blue peter types like Ian Kershaw as well as the disgraced but more original David Irving.
    His only real faults are to ignore the financial aspects as well as the psychological. Churchill was half american, and obsessed with his american mother who ignorerd him and carried out well-publicised affairs with Germans. This part of the book still needs to be written. Meanwhile, Adam Tooze and Liaquat Ahamed have writted the financial accounts of the two great wars, in Lords of Finance and the Wages of Destruction. The three books taken together give a complete understanding of the 20th Century.
    Pat Buchanan does suffer from some other faults. He is American, and believes in freedom and democracy. He still sees the Russians and Soviets as instigators of terror. While this is sometimes true, it is not due to their race or politics, but to their situation. In any case, given that this is a revisionist history, it is a masterpiece.
  • David Bird
    5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinarily good book
    Reviewed in Australia on January 2, 2024
    Excellent book for history buffs. Explains critical aspects of this period in our history that are often overlooked.
  • Raimundo Da Costa Moura
    5.0 out of 5 stars As verdadeiras causas das duas guerras mundiais
    Reviewed in Brazil on March 5, 2016
    Excelente. Um fato histórico visto por um lado neutro e não pela visão dos vencedores. Mostra como o desconhecimento de fatos históricos nos leva a repetir erros com prejuízos incalculáveis