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Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler

Neville Chamberlain, Sir Horace Wilson, & Britain's Plight of Appeasement: 1937-1939

Published by Pegasus Books
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
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About The Book

A radically new view of the British policy of appeasement in the late 1930s, identifying the individuals responsible for a variety of miscalculations and moral surrender that made World War II inevitable.

Appeasement failed in all its goals. The kindest thing that can be said of it is that postponed World War II by one year. Its real effect was to convince Hitler and Mussolini that Britain was weak and afraid of confrontation, encouraging them to ever-greater acts of aggression.

Chamberlain and Wilson blindly pursued bilateral friendship between Britain and the dictators and ferociously resisted alternative policies such as working with France, the Soviet Union, or the U.S. to face down the dictators. They resisted all-out rearmament which would have put the economy on a war footing. These were all the policies advocated by Winston Churchill, the most dangerous opponent of appeasement.

Neither Chamberlain nor Wilson had any experience of day-to-day practical diplomacy. Both thought that the dictators would apply the same standards of rationality and clarity to the policies of Italy and Germany that applied in Britain. They could not grasp that Fascist demagogues operated in an entirely different way to democratic politicians. The catastrophe of the Chamberlain/Wilson appeasement policy offers a vital lesson in how blind conviction in one policy as the only alternative can be fatally damaging.

About The Author

Adrian Phillips is the author of The King Who Had to Go: Edward VIII, Mrs. Simpson, and the Hidden Politics of the Abdication Crisis. Adrian lectures and blogs regularly on the broader history of the period. He lives in England.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Pegasus Books (December 3, 2019)
  • Length: 368 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781643132211

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Raves and Reviews

Adrian Phillips has pulled off a remarkable coup. By sedulous research he has been able to shed fresh light on the intricate political maneuvers surrounding one of most studied episodes in our history—the 1936 abdication crisis. The King Who Had to Go is an elegant and compelling book.

– Piers Brendon, author of 'Edward VIII: The Uncrowned King' (praise for 'The King Who Had to Go')

" A comprehensive examination of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain’s efforts to negotiate peace with Nazi Germany."

– Publishers Weekly

"The King Who Had to Go provides a dramatic and persuasive account of an important episode in British constitutional history. Based on an impressive range of sources, and written with flair, it makes a compelling case for Edward VIII's inadequacy as a monarch."

– Richard Toye, Professor and Head of History, University of Exeter [praise for 'The King Who Had to Go']

"The King Who Had to Go provides a dramatic and persuasive account of an important episode in British constitutional history. Based on an impressive range of sources, and written with flair, it makes a compelling case for Edward VIII's inadequacy as a monarch."

– Richard Toye, Professor and Head of History, University of Exeter [praise for 'The King Who Had to Go']

"This fascinating study is a model of historical sleuthing. Vigorously researched, it should appeal widely to history buffs"

– Library Journal

"A complex tale of the political rivalry that underlay a key episode in 20th-century world events. A fresh interpretation of the question of appeasement that will interest students of 20th-century history."

– Kirkus Reviews

"This very readable and detailed description of how policy was made and implemented gives us a unique way to look at fateful decisions that helped advance events leading to World War II."

– BookPage

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