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Churchill 1940-1945


Under Friendly Fire

ISBN: 9781843410447
Author: Walter Reid
Imprint: Birlinn
Publication Date: Oct 2008
Format: HB

Price: £25.00
Stock Status: in stock

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  Churchill 1940-1945
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"Magnificent. This is a meticulously researched history, but it is also a very moving human story," - Harry Reid, The Herald
In April 1945 Churchill said to Sir Alan Brooke, Chief of the Imperial General Staff, ‘There is only one thing worse than fighting with allies, and that is fighting without them!’  When he became Prime Minister on 10 May 1940 Churchill was without allies. Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain saved Britain from immediate defeat, but it was evident that Britain alone could never win the war.

Churchill looked to America. He said that until Pearl Harbor ‘no lover ever studied every whim of his mistress as I did those of President Roosevelt’. But would Roosevelt have entered the war if Pearl Harbor had not taken place? Until then his actions were ambivalent, and even afterwards America’s policy was largely shaped by self-interest and her idea of what a post-war world should be like. Lend-Lease, for instance, was far from what Churchill publicly described as ‘the most unsordid act in the history of any nation’, but rather a tool of American policy. Churchill’s account of relations with his allies and associates was sanitised for the historical record and has been accepted uncritically. In reality he had to battle with the generals and the CIGS, Tory backbenchers and the War Cabinet, de Gaulle and the Free French and – above all – the Americans. Even his wife, Clementine, could on occasions be remarkably unsupportive. He told his secretary, ‘The difficulty is not in winning the war; it is in persuading people to let you win it – persuading fools’.

Walter Reid, the author of several acclaimed works on 20th-century military history, brings together the result of recent research to create a powerful narrative which reveals how much time and energy was devoted to fighting the war that was excluded from the official accounts, the war with the allies.

Walter Reid was educated at Oxford University, where he read history, and Edinburgh University. He is now based in the west of Scotland, but spends part of the year in France. His previous work includes To Arras, 1917 (Tuckwell Press), and the critically acclaimed biography of Douglas Haig, Architect of Victory (Birlinn, 2006).
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AUTHOR
Walter Reid
DIARY EVENTS
25 January 09
Birlinn authors at Winter Words Festival in Pitlochry
Birlinn authors at Winter Words Festival in Pitlochry
 

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