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Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler: How a British Civil Servant Helped Cause the Second World War

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In Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler Adrian Phillips presents a radical new view of the British policy of appeasement in the late 1930s. No one doubts that appeasement failed, but Phillips shows that it caused active harm – even sabotaging Britain’s preparations for war. He goes far further than previous historians in identifying the individuals responsible for a catalogue of miscalculations, deviousness and moral surrender that made the Second World War inevitable, and highlights the alternative policies that might have prevented it.

Phillips outlines how Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and his chief advisor, Sir Horace Wilson, formed a fatally inept two-man foreign-policy machine that was immune to any objective examination, criticism or assessment – ruthlessly manipulating the media to support appeasement while batting aside policies advocated by Winston Churchill, the most vocal opponent of appeasement.

Churchill understood that Hitler was the implacable enemy of peace – and Britain – but Chamberlain and Wilson were terrified that any display of firmness would provoke him. For the first time, Phillips brings to light how Wilson and Churchill had been enemies since an incident early in their careers, and how, eventually, opposing Churchill became an end in itself.

Featuring new revelations about the personalities involved and the shameful manipulations and betrayals that went into appeasement, including an attempt to buy Hitler off with a ruthless colonialist deal in Africa, Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler shines a compelling and original light on one of the darkest hours in British diplomatic history.

Author: Phillips Adrian
Publisher: BITEBACK PUBLISHING
Pages: 384
ISBN: 9781785904752
Cover: -
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Adrian Phillips graduated in modern languages at Cambridge University and was fortunate enough to be able to use his language skills professionally. He worked as an investment analyst in London and Frankfurt for twenty-five years covering the German and French stock markets, with a particular interest in the political background to financial markets. He then took a postgraduate master’s in modern history at Birmingham University, specialising in the policy machinery at 10 Downing Street during the 1930s. His first book, published in 2016, was The King Who Had to Go: Edward VIII, Mrs Simpson and the Hidden Politics of the Abdication Crisis, which broke new ground by looking at the steps the government took to outmanoeuvre the King. Since the book appeared, Adrian has made regular contributions to TV documentaries about the royal family.

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