Victory at All Costs

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The New York Sun

If there is one thing, and one thing only, to be grasped about Britain’s failure to head off Hitler in time, it’s that it was almost certainly inevitable. Unfortunately, this is something that readers of “Troublesome Young Men” (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 448 pages, $27.50), a new book that explains how Winston Churchill rose to power and appeasement fell, will have to discover from another, more balanced source.

What’s more, to describe “Troublesome Young Men” as a “new” book in anything other than the most literal sense is to be too kind. Yes, the additional, if occasionally rather gossipy, focus that Lynne Olson puts on some of the critics of appeasement who rallied around Churchill is welcome (she’s particularly good on the studied ambiguity of Anthony Eden, the former foreign minister who had resigned from Neville Chamberlain’s government in early 1938), but for the most part, the story she tells is as dated as Chamberlain’s frock coat. More morality play than serious study of the past, and riddled with the clichés of class warfare, it’s a version of events that had already found its definitive form by 1940 with the publication of “Guilty Men,” a fierce, best-selling tract by the pseudonymous “Cato” (in reality, a triumvirate led by Michael Foot, a young journalist who later became leader of the Labour Party).

“Guilty Men” was brilliantly written, brilliantly persuasive, and brilliantly unjust. Designed to saddle Britain’s Tories with responsibility for the mess in which the country found itself after the collapse of France, while at the same time carefully exonerating the Left from any meaningful share of the blame, this cunning polemic succeeded to an extent that even its shrewd, deft, and manipulative authors cannot have expected. It helped pave the way for the crushing defeat of the Conservative Party (even with Churchill at its head) in the 1945 election, and it shaped the way that Britons thought of the disastrous run-up to the war. More than six decades later, it still does.

It’s no surprise that it played so well. By making scapegoats of toffs and Tories, Cato spared the rest of the British people the embarrassment of asking themselves what exactly they had been doing while the threat from the Third Reich grew. It was, after all, a period in which Britons in their millions had not only participated in 1935’s unofficial “Peace Ballot” (collective security, “effective” sanctions, you know how it goes), but had also, after three more years of Hitler, taken to the streets to celebrate the deal Chamberlain cut at Munich. Tellingly, Ms. Olson has nothing to say about the former. The latter she attributes to Chamberlain’s manipulation of both the press and his own party.

To an extent she’s right. Some of the most interesting passages in “Troublesome Young Men” are those that show how the prime minister was nothing like the ineffective weakling of popular legend, at least when it came to domestic politics. Despite that, Chamberlain could not (even had he wanted to) afford to ignore the concerns of an electorate ready to pay almost any price to avoid a fresh European war. Any price, that is, other than spending money soon enough on the rearmament that might have made a difference.

Might? Part of the appeal of “Guilty Men” was that it had no room for such shilly-shallying. To the armchair strategists that wrote it, all was clear. This should have been done. That should have been tried. It was an approach, helped by hindsight and the luxury of the hypothetical, which came with an additional advantage. Suggesting that the solutions to the conundrum posed by Hitler were obvious implied that the failure to adopt them (until too late) must have been the result of stupidity, stubbornness, naïveté, or something more malign. In essence, it presumes some sort of guilt. Like many before her, Ms. Olson has gratefully applauded that verdict.

In reality, the situation was far more complicated. There was indeed plenty of stubbornness, naïveté, and the rest of it to go round in the Baldwin and Chamberlain governments, but the idea that there were any easy answers to the problems that Britain faced is nonsense. For example, there was no significant political constituency for military action against Germany until at least the Anschluss, and even if there had been, how would it have been paid for? A few years after the worst of the Great Depression, there was little money to spare, especially for a nation already burdened by bills for the defense of an empire. As for the failure to cooperate with potential allies against Hitler (another key element in Chamberlain’s rap sheet), one, the USSR, was a hostile, genocidal dictatorship with, as the Finns were shortly to demonstrate, a feeble army; another, France, was thoroughly demoralized; and a third, Poland, was to last less than three weeks when the panzers struck. And America, of course, was nowhere to be seen.

Even if we put moral considerations to one side, none of this necessarily justifies what was done at Munich, but it helps explain it. That Ms. Olson has largely chosen to ignore these issues is a shame. She’s a skilled and lively writer, quite capable of handling complex topics in a way that would not deter the popular audience at which this book (with its occasional lapses into Harlequin baroque) is clearly aimed. As it is, “Troublesome Young Men,” which finds itself on much firmer ground when its author turns her attention to the Phony War and Chamberlain’s fall, is a fair read, but, all too often, an unfair history.

Mr. Stuttaford, a contributing editor of National Review Online, last wrote for these pages on the film “300.”


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