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Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler

Neville Chamberlain, Sir Horace Wilson, & Britain's Plight of Appeasement

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Appeasement ultimately failed in all its objectives, merely delaying World War II by a year. Its true consequence was to embolden Hitler and Mussolini, leading them to perceive Britain as weak and hesitant to confront aggression. The pivotal moment in the Czech crisis of September 1938 occurred when Wilson met Hitler alone, leaving him convinced that Britain would not intervene to defend Czechoslovakia. The subsequent dismemberment of Czechoslovakia marked not the end but a continuation of appeasement. Chamberlain's Anglo-German Declaration was a reflection of his vanity, yet both he and Wilson believed it genuinely secured "peace for our time." Their pursuit of a bilateral friendship with dictators blinded them to alternative strategies, such as collaborating with France, the Soviet Union, or the U.S. to confront the aggressors. They also resisted full rearmament, which would have prepared the economy for war—policies advocated by Winston Churchill, their staunch opponent. Churchill was despised by both men, who could not accept his view of Hitler as an unyielding enemy of peace. Their animosity toward Churchill stemmed from a long-standing rivalry, revealed for the first time in this account. Lacking practical diplomatic experience, Chamberlain and Wilson misjudged the dictators, failing to recognize that Fascist leaders operated under different principles than democratic politicians. The disastrous outcomes of their appease

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Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler, Adrian Phillips

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Pubblicato
2019
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