Churchill's view of events 1929-1940 Flashcards

1
Q

Why was Churchill disliked by Labour and the Liberals?

A
  • Labour remembered his bitter attacks on trade unions during the General Strike of 1926
  • his responsibility for the failed Gallipoli attacks in 1915 also made him unpopular
  • he had taken a strong line against making concessions to Indian self-government, which went against the views of moderates in all parties
  • he was considered to have aligned himself with extreme right-wing imperialists and to be out of touch with more modern Conservative policies
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2
Q

Why was Churchill’s stance in the mid-1930s unrealistic?

A
  • he seemed too willing to risk war again when public opinion was opposed to conflict, and there was a belief in reaching negotiated settlements
  • Chamberlain became Prime Minister in 1937 and was very committed to a policy of appeasement
  • his criticism of British defences seemed hypocritical because it was his defence cuts of the 1920s which laid the basis for Britain’s military weakness
  • his urge to rearm also ignored the economic realities of the 1930s, when government spending had been cut and unemployment was high
  • many people believed that WW1 started due to an arms race, did not want a repeat
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3
Q

Why did Churchill oppose the British Government’s moves towards change in India?

A
  • he thought that Gandhi and Indian nationalism would be content only with full independence, so concessions were a waste of time
  • he saw India as the ‘jewel in the crown’ of the empire
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4
Q

What were the consequences of Churchill’s opposition to British policy towards India?

A
  • He had aligned himself with extreme and old-fashioned imperialists and cut himself off from mainstream Conservative party opinion
  • even some of Churchill’s friends and supporters found some of his views on India too extreme - seen as a racist
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5
Q

Why was the Abdication unpopular?

A
  • Edward VIII marrying an American who had been twice divorced would have been difficult for the British public to accept at a time when divorce still bore a stigma
  • the cabinet did not give its approval for the marriage and therefore if Edward had married Mrs Simpson, the Government would have had to resign
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6
Q

Why did Churchill support the King?

A
  • he joined a small group called the ‘King’s friends’
  • he had a sincere devotion to hereditary monarchy and saw it as his duty to support the rightful kind
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7
Q

What were the consequences of Churchill supporting the King?

A
  • Churchill was in a minority, yet again, and at odds with his party and its leadership
  • he seemed oblivious to public opinion and appeared eccentric and old-fashioned
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7
Q

What was Churchill’s attitude towards developments in Germany

A
  • Churchill had been part of the government that established the peace treaty with Germany in 1919
  • when Hitler reintroduced conscription in 1935, he was worried this was another sign of a revival of German militarism
  • The British Government’s response to German rearmament was to try to limit it through the Anglo-German Naval Treaty of 1935. Churchill criticised this as weak.
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8
Q

Why did Churchill not gain more support for his views?

A
  • some thought Germany had been treated too harshly by the Treaty of Versailles
  • Churchill seemed to be advocating initiating another arms race. It was widely thought that the naval race between Britain and Germany had led to the First World War
  • Churchill’s worry about German air power so early seemed to be alarmist
  • He appeared somewhat hypocritical as he initiated much British disarmament in the 1920s
  • Churchill seemed to ignore the role of the League of Nations in keeping peace at a time when there were still high hopes for the League’s success
  • Given Churchill’s views on the Empire and India, his anti-German stance seemed to be yet another example of his living in the past
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9
Q

Munich Agreement of 1938

A

Chamberlain agreed to the dismembering of the independent state of Czechoslovakia, making the German-speaking part, the Sudetenland, part of Germany

Hitler promised ‘no more territorial demands in Europe’

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10
Q

Anschluss

A

1938 - Hitler’s annexation of Austria

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11
Q

Churchill’s reaction to appeasement

A
  • As Chamberlain had given in to German demands in a conference on German soil (Munich Agreement), Churchill believed Britain had come across as weak and was in danger of being dominated by Germany
  • He believed the Munich Agreement strengthened Germany and would make it more difficult for Britain to control future expansion
  • He saw it as a ‘defeat without a war’
  • Britain failed to maintain a stand against Hitler after he had gone back on his word
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12
Q

What was Churchill’s policy instead of Appeasement?

A
  • his view was that Britain should have gone to war in 1938
  • Churchill believed that a strong stand by Britain and other nations would deter Germany, and may have encouraged opposition to Hitler within Germany itself
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13
Q

Why was Churchill’s policy criticised at the time?

A
  • it was unlikely that Britain would find allies in a war against Germany:
  • There was no certainty that France would have supported joint military action, the USA was following a policy of isolationism, Churchill was openly anti-communist - not a good relationship with the USSR
  • rearmament had not really begun, and there was no expeditionary force ready to send to Europe

-The British chiefs of staff were worried that war against Germany would also become a war against Hitler’s allies, Italy and Japan

  • Churchill did not really speak or write much about Japan and neglected its possible threat to Britain’s Asian colonies in the event of war
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14
Q

When was the Luftwaffe created?

A

1935 - broke the Treaty of Versailles

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15
Q

How did Churchill’s opposition to Appeasement have some merit?

A
  • The breaking of the Munich agreement by Hitler when he occupied the Czech state made Britain look weak and confirmed Churchill’s suspicions of Hitler’s expansionist agenda
  • Though Munich gave Britain a chance to rearm, Germany also rearmed at considerable speed from 1938-9
16
Q

When did Churchill become Prime Minister ?

A

10 May 1940

17
Q

Why was Churchill not the top candidate for PM in 1940?

A
  • he had urged the mining of Norwegian waters which had provoked the Norwegian campaign - which failed
  • The Queen resented his support for Edward VII, and both she and George VI had admired Chamberlain and supported Appeasement
  • Chamberlain was a well-respected leader
  • Record of failures- Gallipoli in 1915 and the restoration of the Gold Standard in 1926
  • he had been out of office for most of the 1930s and was in his sixties - out of touch and old fashioned?
  • Churchill had been overbearing as a member of the war cabinet as First Lord of the Admiralty, and the naval commanders found him interfering and overbearing
18
Q

Reasons for Chamberlain’s resignation in May 1940

A
  • by May 1940 there was a feeling in parliament that he was not waging war well enough
  • failure in the Norwegian Campaign (April 1940), and there had been no attempt to engage with German forces in the West
  • Wavering support for Chamberlain was shown in the debate in the House of Commons over Norway when 40 Conservative MPs had voted against the Government and a further 40 abstained
  • Chamberlain was also seriously ill by this time, and it was probably accepted by many MPs that a change was needed
19
Q

Reasons for Churchill’s appointment

A
  • Churchill had considerable popular support in the country due to his stand against Appeasement and his obvious determination to pursue war vigorously
  • Lord Halifax was the preferred candidate of most Conservatives and was a friend of the King. However, he could not sit in the House of Commons as he sat in the House of Lords. He also would not accept the post
  • had wartime experience
  • the German invasion of Holland and Belgium prior to invading France created a sense of urgency and indicated that Britain needed a leader who understood war