Churchill’s
Colossal Blunders
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
Europe, the
Mother Continent of Western Man, is today aging and dying, unable
to sustain the birth rates needed to keep her alive, or to resist
conquest by an immigrant invasion from the Third World
What happened
to the nations that only a century ago ruled the world?
In Churchill,
Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War': How Britain Lost Its Empire and
the West Lost the World, published today, this writer will
argue that it was colossal blunders of British statesmen, Winston
Churchill foremost among them, that turned two European wars into
world wars that may yet prove the mortal wounds of the West.
The first
blunder was a secret decision of the inner Cabinet in 1906 to send
a British army across the Channel to fight in any Franco-German
War. Had the Kaiser known the British Empire would fight for France,
he would have moved more decisively than he did to halt the plunge
to war in July 1914.
Had Britain
not declared war on Aug. 4 and brought in Japan, Italy and the United
States, the war would have ended far sooner. Leninism and Stalinism
would never have triumphed in Russia, and Hitler would never have
come to power in Germany.
The second
blunder was the vengeful Treaty of Versailles that added a million
square miles to the British Empire while putting millions of Germans
under Czech and Polish rule in violation of the terms of the armistice
and Woodrow Wilson's 14 Points.
A
third was the British decision to capitulate to U.S. demands in
1921 and throw over a faithful Japanese ally of 20 years. Tokyo
took its revenge, 20 years later, by inflicting the greatest defeat
in British history, the surrender of Singapore and an army of 80,000
to a Japanese army half that size.
A fourth
British blunder, which Neville Chamberlain called the "very midsummer
of madness," was the 1935 decision to sanction Italy for a colonial
war in Ethiopia. London destroyed the Stresa Front of Britain, France
and Italy that Mussolini had forged to contain Germany, and drove
Mussolini straight into the arms of a Nazi dictator he loathed.
In 1936,
France sounded out the British to determine if they would support
a drive to push German troops out of the Rhineland that Hitler had
occupied in violation of Versailles. The British refused. And Churchill
congratulated France for taking the matter up with the League of
Nations, and said the ideal solution would be a voluntary Nazi withdrawal
from the Rhineland to show the world that Hitler respected the sanctity
of treaties.
Munich,
70 years ago this September, was a disaster. But it was a direct,
if not inevitable, consequence of a Versailles treaty that had consigned
3.5 million Sudeten Germans to Czech rule against their will and
in violation of the principle of self-determination.
But the
fatal blunder was not Munich.
It was
the decision of March 31, 1939, to hand a war guarantee to a neo-fascist
regime of Polish colonels who had joined Hitler in the rape of Czechoslovakia.
Britain
gave Warsaw a blank check to take her to war over a town, Danzig,
the British themselves thought should be restored to Germany. Result:
a Hitler-Stalin Pact and a six-year war that left scores of millions
dead, Europe in ruins, the British empire bankrupt and breaking,
10 European nations under the barbaric rule of Joseph Stalin and
half a century of Cold War. Had there been no war guarantee to Poland,
there might have been no war, no Nazi invasion of Western Europe
and no Holocaust.
Churchill
was the indispensable war leader who held on until Hitler committed
his fatal blunders, invading Russia and declaring war on America.
He was also the man most responsible for Britain's fall from mistress
of the greatest empire since Rome to an island dependency of the
United States.
About the
character of the Bolshevik regime in 1919 and Nazi regime in 1933,
Churchill had been right. About British rearmament, he had been
right. But Churchill was also often disastrously wrong.
He led
the West down a moral incline to its own barbarism by imposing a
starvation blockade on Germany in 1914 and launching air terror
against open cities in 1940. These policies brought death to hundreds
of thousands of women and children.
He
was behind the greatest British military blunders in two wars: the
Dardanelles disaster of 1915 and the Norwegian fiasco of 1940 that
brought down Chamberlain and vaulted Churchill to power.
While excoriating
Chamberlain for appeasing Hitler, Churchill's own appeasement of
Stalin lasted longer and was even more egregious and costly, ensuring
that the causes for which Britain sacrificed the empire – the freedom
of Poland and preventing a hostile power from dominating Europe
– were lost.
Churchill
was, however, surely right when he told FDR in their first meeting
after Pearl Harbor that they should call the war they were now in
"The Unnecessary War."
He was
a Great Man – at the cost of his country's greatness.
May
24, 2008
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
Patrick
J. Buchanan Archives
|