A Necessary Book
Posted on June 4th, 2009
by Laurence Vance |
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Pat Buchanan and I have some differences – some major differences.
He is a Catholic; I am a Protestant. He is a conservative; I am a libertarian. He is a protectionist; I am a freetrader. He has disparaged Wal-Mart; I spend most of my money there. He believes Alexander Hamilton was one of the greatest of the Founding Fathers; I much prefer Thomas Jefferson. He has worked for Republican presidents; I loathe Republican presidents. He favors a government limited to conservative and Republican policies; I favor a government as limited as possible.
There is one thing, however, that Buchanan and I do agree on, and it is something that I consider to be very important: World War II was an unnecessary war. It was unnecessary for the Treaty of Versailles to enlarge the British, French, Italian, and Japanese empires at the expense of Germany. It was unnecessary for Britain to end its Anglo-Japanese treaty. It was unnecessary for Britain to impose sanctions on Italy, driving Mussolini into an alliance with Hitler. It was unnecessary for Britain to issue a war guarantee to Poland. And most importantly, it was unnecessary for 420,000 American soldiers to die fighting a foreign war.
I am not the only one to express a new-found agreement with Pat Buchanan. Writing in The Texas Observer, Josh Rosenblatt explains:
One of the more disconcerting (if poorly publicized) effects of the last eight years of American foreign policy is that I’m now forced to admit there are things Pat Buchanan and I agree on. It was so much easier during the reign of the first President Bush, when Buchanan was the happy culture warrior, fire-breathing his way across the country attacking gays, feminists, liberals and other degenerate life forms as he went, and I could hate the man and sleep comfortably. Now it seems like every time I turn on MSNBC, there’s Buchanan, condemning the second President Bush’s Iraq War, railing against his blundering efforts in Afghanistan, bemoaning his cowboy posturing toward Iran and Russia. And before I know what’s happening, I’m nodding my head and thinking, “Maybe Pat Buchanan isn’t such a bad guy after all.” Inevitably I end up turning the TV off in self-disgust, imagining my father turning somersaults in his grave.
There are really five Pat Buchanans.
There is Pat Buchanan the syndicated columnist. God only knows how many newspapers and magazines Buchanan has been published in. He is also a co-founder of The American Conservative magazine.
There is Pat Buchanan the TV commentator. Besides being a regular on The McLaughlin Group, Crossfire, and The Capital Gang, Buchanan’s nationally-recognized face has been seen on countless other news programs.
There is Pat Buchanan the political operative. He was an adviser to Nixon’s presidential campaigns, and worked in the Nixon and Ford White Houses. He served under Reagan as the White House Communications Director.
There is Pat Buchanan the politician. In 1992 and 1996, he sought the Republican presidential nomination. He was the Reform Party’s presidential candidate in the 2000.
And then there is Pat Buchanan the author. He is the author of the following books:
- The New Majority: President Nixon at Mid-Passage (1973)
- Conservative Votes, Liberal Victories: Why the Right Has Failed (1975)
- Right from the Beginning (1988)
- The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy (1988)
- America Asleep: The Free Trade Syndrome and the Global Economic Challenge: A New Conservative Foreign Economic Policy for America (1991)
- A Republic, Not an Empire: Reclaiming America’s Destiny (1999)
- The Death of the West: How Dying Populations and Immigrant Invasions Imperil Our Country and Civilization (2002)
- Where the Right Went Wrong: How Neoconservatives Subverted the Reagan Revolution and Hijacked the Bush Presidency (2004)
- State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America (2006)
- Day of Reckoning: How Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart (2007)
- Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World (2008)
Buchanan’s books are not all created equal; e.g., see David Gordon’s review of A Republic, Not an Empire and The Death of the West. There is one book, however, that is not only Buchanan’s best and most important book; it is one of the best and most important books ever written. I am referring to his latest book on World War II: Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World. and
Now, I realize that my lofty assessment of Buchanan’s book might be dismissed as a hyperbolic exaggeration on steroids. But as one who is a student of war and foreign policy, and writes extensively about war-related issues, and especially on the folly of war, I, having read the book very, very carefully, cannot, must not, say otherwise. I don’t recall ever having highlighted, dog-eared, written in, read, and reread any book like I have this one.
Since the book came out last year, and has been reviewed – positively (The American Conservative), negatively (The Jerusalem Post), and savagely (Newsweek) – many times already, I am forgoing a formal review. I knew when the book came out last year that it was something I would have to read and write about, but it was only after going through the book for myself that I realized just what a monumental thing it was that Pat Buchanan had done.
This book is so important, so crucial to the cause of peace, because World War II, more than any other war in the history of the world, is considered to be, not only necessary, but just, right, and good. Indeed, World War II is known as the “Good War.”
But if this is true then we have a problem, for, as Buchanan writes in his introduction: “It was the war begun in September 1939 that led to the slaughter of the Jews and tens of millions of Christians, the devastation of Europe, Stalinization of half the continent, the fall of China to Maoist madness, and half a century of Cold War.” How can a war that resulted in the deaths of 50 to 70 million people be termed a good war? How can a war in which two-thirds of those who died were civilians be termed a good war?
Whenever I write about the folly of war, I inevitably get e-mail from some armchair warrior who says something like: “You [pacifist, appeaser, liberal, communist, traitor, America-hater, peacenik, coward]! Don’t you know that if the U.S. military had not intervened to stop Hitler we would all be speaking German right now?”
A greater lie has never been uttered.
Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War debunks the myths about World War II being necessary and demolishes the arguments offered in defense of World War II as a “good” war.
But this is not just a book on World War II. And it could not be otherwise, for World War II was but the continuation of “the great civil war of the West.” “This is not peace,” said French Marshal Ferdinand Foch after the “war to end all wars,” “it is an armistice for twenty years.” “All lines of inquiry lead back to World War I,” said American diplomat and historian George Kennan. “Versailles,” writes Buchanan, “had created not only an unjust but an unsustainable peace.”
Accordingly, the first three chapters of Buchanan’s book are about the causes and consequences of World War I. Chapters 4 through 12 likewise treat World War II. Buchanan points out in his introduction the two great myths about these wars: “The first is that World War I was fought ‘to make the world safe for Democracy.’ The second is that World War II was the ‘Good War,’ a glorious crusade to rid the world of Fascism that turned out wonderfully well.” That first statement is now generally recognized for the myth that it is. The second; however, is still a widely-held opinion – hence the need for this book.
The last three chapters of the book deal with Hitler’s real ambitions (”Hitler never wanted war with Britain.”), Churchill as a poor choice for man of the century (Churchill’s concessions at Moscow were far worse than Chamberlain’s at Munich.”), and America inheriting Britain’s empire (”There is hardly a blunder of the British Empire we have not replicated.”).
The book is also a history and geography lesson: Bohemia, the Sudetenland, Alsace, Lorraine, Danzig, Transylvania, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Abyssinia, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Moravia, Sarajevo, Trianon, Trieste, the Polish Corridor, Galicia, Tyrol, Ruthenia, Silesia, and the Treaties of Versailles, Trianon, Brest-Litovsk, and St. Germain. And aside from the usual relevant pictures in the center of the book like we see in most books on the world wars, Buchanan’s book includes very detailed maps that wonderfully supplement the text.
There are no battle accounts in Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. No details on troop movements. No information on fighting techniques. No theories about military strategy. No particulars about weapons. The crucial question for Buchanan is: “Were these two devastating wars Britain declared on Germany wars of necessity, or wars of choice?”
Britain? Yes, Great Britain, the United Kingdom, the empire on which the sun never set. You mean you thought both world wars were all the fault of Germany?
Now, we know all about the evils of Hitler and Nazism: the fascism, the murder, the mayhem, the destruction, the aggression, the militarism, the racism, the anti-Semitism, the death camps. Buchanan doesn’t excuse Germany in the least: “None of this is to minimize the evil of Nazi ideology, or the capabilities of the Nazi war machine, or the despicable crimes of Hitler’s regime, or the potential threat of Nazi Germany to Great Britain once war was declared.” And neither does he slight the heroism of the British: “The question this book addresses is not whether the British were heroic. That is settled for all time. But were their statesmen wise?”
When it came to World War I, British statesmen were anything but wise:
British hawks looked to a European war to enhance national prestige and expand the empire.
Unknown to the Cabinet and Parliament, a tiny cabal had made a decision fateful for Britain, the empire, and the world. Under the guidance of Edward Grey, the foreign secretary from 1905 to 1916, British and French officers plotted Britain’s entry into a Franco-German war from the first shot.
It was the British decision to send an army across the Channel to fight in Western Europe, for the first time in exactly one hundred years, that led to the defeat of the Schlieffen Plan, four years of trench warfare, America’s entry, Germany’s collapse in the autumn of 1918, the abdication of the Kaiser, the dismemberment of Germany at Versailles, and the rise to power of a veteran of the Western Front who, four years after the war’s end, was unreconciled to his nation’s defeat.
Had Britain not declared war on Germany in 1914, Canada, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, and India would not have followed the Mother Country in. Nor would Britain’s ally Japan. Nor would Italy, which London lured in with secret bribes of territory from the Habsburg and Ottoman empires. Nor would America have gone to war had Britain stayed out. Germany would have been victorious, perhaps in months. There would have been no Lenin, no Stalin, no Versailles, no Hitler, no Holocaust.
Buchanan gives five reasons why the Britain government at the time “turned the European war of August 1 into a world war”: to preserve France as a great power, to defend British honor, to retain their control of the government, Germanophobia, and imperial ambition and opportunism.
The cost of Britain’s folly: 700,000 dead British soldiers, plus 200,000 more from throughout the empire. And for what?
The caricature of Germany as the most militaristic country is just that. Buchanan points out that from Waterloo to World War I, Germany had only been involved in three wars while Great Britain had engaged in ten.
World War I, as Buchanan quotes British historian John Keegan, was “an unnecessary conflict. Unnecessary because the train of events that led to its outbreak might have been broken at any point during the five weeks that preceded the first clash of arms, had prudence or common goodwill found a voice.”
And then there is World War II:
Had Britain not given a war guarantee to Poland in March 1939, then declared war on September 3, bringing in South Africa, Canada, Australia, India, New Zealand, and the United States, a German-Polish war might never have become a six-year world war in which fifty million would perish.
Thus did the British government, in panic over a false report about a German invasion of Poland that was neither planned nor prepared, give a war guarantee to a dictatorship it did not trust, in a part of Europe where it had no vital interests, committing itself to a war it could not win.
From 1914–1918, Britain and France, with millions of soldiers, had barely been able to keep the German army out of Paris. Two million Americans had been needed to crack the German lines. Now, with a tiny fraction of the British army of 1918, with former allies Russia, Japan, and Italy now hostile, and with America now neutral, Britain was handling out war guarantees not only to Belgium and Holland, but also to Poland and Rumania.
Buchanan’s conclusion will be a tough one for some to swallow: “It was Britain that turned both European wars into world wars.”
Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War is a necessary book.
It is necessary because it tells the real story of British prime minister Neville Chamberlain’s “appeasement” of Hitler at Munich. Because the Sudeten Germans in Czechoslovakia – a multiethnic, multilingual, multicultural, Catholic-Protestant conglomerate that had never before existed – “hated the Prague regime and had no loyalty to a nation where they were second-class citizens” (there were more Germans in Czechoslovakia than Slovaks), Chamberlain, correctly, and not alone, “did not believe that maintaining Czech rule over three million unhappy Germans was worth a war.”
It is necessary because it shows that the greatest blunder in British history was not Munich, but the Polish war guarantee that committed Britain to fight for a Polish dictatorship that had considered making a preemptive strike against Germany, signed, like Stalin, a nonaggression pact with Hitler, and joined in the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia after the Munich Agreement. Here Buchanan is not alone. Lloyd George considered it “a frightful gamble” and “sheer madness.” Former First Lord of the Admiralty Cooper recorded in his diary: “Never before in our history have we left in the hands of one of the smaller powers the decision whether or not Britain goes to war.” It was “the maddest single action this country has ever taken,” said a member of Parliament. I have written about this foolish Polish war guarantee here.
It is necessary because it demolishes the cult of Churchill. Winston Churchill, rather than being the indispensable man of the century, was “the most bellicose champion of British entry into the European war of 1914 and the German-Polish war of 1939.” Among his other crimes, Churchill appeased Stalin – one of the twentieth century’s greatest mass murderers, whose crimes exceeded those of Hitler – by agreeing to his “annexation of the Baltic republics,” accepting “his plunder from the devil’s pact with Hitler,” and turning “a blind eye to the Katyn massacre.”
It is necessary because it explains how Hitler never wanted war with Britain. Hitler wanted absolute power in Germany. Hitler wanted to overturn the Versailles Treaty. Hitler wanted to restore lands to Germany. Hitler wanted to enlarge the German empire to the east. Hitler wanted to cleanse Germany of Jews. Hitler wanted to destroy Bolshevism. Hitler wanted Germany to achieve economic self-sufficiency in Europe. Hitler wanted to go down in history as “the greatest German of them all.” But Hitler never wanted war with Britain. To Hitler: “Great Britain was Germany’s natural ally and the nation and empire he most admired. He did not covet British colonies. He did not want or seek a fleet to rival the Royal Navy. He did not wish to bring down the British Empire. He was prepared to appease Britain to make her a friend of Germany.”
It is necessary because it confirms that Hitler was not a threat to the United States. The German Luftwaffe lost the Battle of Britain to the Royal Air Force; the German Navy was no match for Britain’s Royal Navy (”The Navy – what need have we of that?,” said Hitler in 1936). At the start of the war, Germany had only two battleships. The Bismarck had not been built yet – and it would be sunk on its maiden voyage. There were no troopships, landing barges, or transports for tanks and artillery. If Hitler could not cross the English Channel and conquer Great Britain, how could he possibly have been a threat to America? Buchanan dismisses Germany’s supposed plans “to build a massive surface fleet, develop a trans-atlantic bomber, and procure naval bases” as “comic-book history.” The historical truth is that “there are no known German plans to acquire the thousand ships needed to convey and convoy such an army and its artillery, tanks, planes, guns, munitions, equipment, fuel, and food across the Atlantic.” And as Buchanan points out about German bombers: “A trip over the Atlantic and back would require twenty hours of flying to drop a five-ton load on New York.” And if even today the U.S. Air Force doesn’t have a bomber that can fly round trip from the Midwest to Germany without refueling, how could German bombers in the 1940s have possibly bombed the United States and returned to Germany when air-to-air fueling had not yet been invented?
Was it necessary that tens of millions were slaughtered to prevent Hitler from slaughtering millions?
Certainly not.
But don’t take Pat Buchanan’s word for it when we have the word of Churchill himself:
One day President Roosevelt told me that he was asking publicly for suggestions about what the war should be called. I said at once, “The Unnecessary War.” There never was a war more easy to stop than that which has just wrecked what was left of the world from the previous struggle.
And if World War II was unnecessary, then how much more unnecessary are the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan?
Churchill, Hitler, and the Unnecessary War – buy it, read it, digest it, and refer to it often. And the next time someone tries to justify some U.S. military intervention by appealing to the “Good War,” ask him what was so good about it.
Laurence M. Vance [send him mail] writes from Pensacola, FL. He is the author of Christianity and War and Other Essays Against the Warfare State. His newest book is The Revolution that Wasn’t. Visit his website.
Copyright © 2009 by LewRockwell.com.








The Pacific is even wider: I guess Japan didn’t have to worry about bombing att6acks.
Of course, I’m just pointing out one fallacy out of many. I could go on: like, most of the tens of millions that died in WWII were Russian or Polish or Chinese: somehow, I don’t think that Churchill could have prevented those deaths - except by much _earlier_ military action against Hitler, say in 1933. Because Hitler was determined to invade, conquer, and enslave the East, just as Japan was determined to conquer and enslave China. We didn’t plant that idea in their pointy heads: they came up with it themselves.
Which is course what Churchill meant when he called it an unnecessary war: determined action by the Western Allies could easily stopped Hitler and caused his overtthrow in the early days.
Judging from the evidence, looking on the one hand at the people who think that a few ragheads are an existential threat to Western civilization, on the other at those that don’t believe that Hitler was worth fighting, it’s apparent that common sense is the rarest thing on Earth.
Laurence Vance - you are interesting. Pat Buchanan is interesting.
Here is what the US “says” it was thinking at the time, and it also makes interesting reading.
http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/events/index.html
The question I always come back to, is:
“If we were attacked by Japan in Pearl Harbor, in dec 1941, and if Auschwitz had 6 working ovens, and 15 more on order some months before that…”
“…then can *anyone prove* that we didn’t know about the holocaust plans?”
I raise this question, *not* to refute you, but to ask what I think is a legitimate point. That is, how do we go about *proving* the non-existence of classified documents? The thinking of many people is that we keep this matter classified to reduce our liability as to “who knew what and when, and how long was it, before we began to act on it?”
I mean, saying Winston Churchill caused WWII, is like saying George Soros accidently ignited the world wide financial crisis while trying to manipulate oil and corn futures, to arrange the famous Democratic October Surprise.
A most interesting essay. I’ve not read Buchanan’s book but reviews of same and find the arguments compelling. My epiphany about WW2 began in the 60s when I found a book, “The Broken Seal”, Ladislas Farago (IIRC) which was the first indication that ‘the day of infany’ (”sneak” attack) was anything but.
Most recently, “The Pearl Harbor Myth” , George Victor, and “Human Smoke” , Nicholson Baker, added to my knowledge of real history — quite different from what I was taught in school decades ago.
I’ve also delved into the real WW1 story, and though I have but a secondary reference, the “Memoirs, Vol. 2″ of William Jennings Bryan, allegedly has a copy of the secret treaty that Col. House organized with the British in 1916, to get the U.S. into that debacle. It’s interesting that two ‘great American presidents’ both campaigned for re-election on the basis of keeping America out of a foreign war.
And remembering that the peacetime draft began in 1940 makes one wonder, What for?
But then, the embargoes and provocations by FDR against the Japanese does throw some light on the matter. And that’s not the least of it — using American military personnel and ships to assist the British in hunting U-boats, and that an American plane with American pilot (but British crew) was the one which targetted the Bismarck before the U.S. was ‘drawn’ into war …
One really has to feel bad for Short and Kimmel in Hawaii and MacArthur in the Phillipines, none of whom were warned of the impending attack, though it was known to everyone except the American people. That story of the Western Union messenger bicycling around Pearl Harbor on a Sunday, trying to get some military official to sign for the message from George Marshall, is true.
It’s easy to see how “Saddam’s WMD” was sold so easily. And how despite all past history, how someone believes they can prevail in Afghanistan.
Gee, I actually agree with Pat about a lot of things, but think he’s off the wall so far as WWII is concerned.
To say that Hitler never wanted war with Britain is like saying that Stalin never wanted war with the West, except it’s even less on target.
Hitler wanted a continental empire and all the fruits of victory whether or not he actually wanted war with Britain. And it could pretty much be expected that Britain, which had gone to war with Louis XIV, Napoleon, and the Kaiser, probably with even less reason, would go to war with Nazi Germany.
Britain’s established policy was to prevent a single power from conquering all of Europe of force. If Britain went to war against less obnoxious tyrants, what grounds were there for exepting that they’d make an exception for the particularly noxious Nazi regime?
People will argue about Churchill and his role in history. But the way he’s used as a kind of plaster saint to sanctify people’s own beliefs is offensive. That goes for neocons who use Churchill to justify foreign interventions, but also for their opponents who seize on some comment of Churchill’s like “the unnecessary war” or “”America should have minded her own business.” Not everything Winston Churchill said or did was correct or made sense. Those arguing against his most important decision ought to recognize that.
Here is a review of a book titled: Unconditional Hatred: German War Guilt Post W. W. II, by Russell Grenfell, R.N. (Retired Captain in the British Navy. You can find the review on Amazon. I think it supports Buchanan’s thesis, it may be listed as a source, i don’t know. The reviewer states:
Russell Grenfell, R.N. (Retired Captain in the British Navy) wrote a lucid book on the insanity of British foreign policy “experts” that led the British into two disasterous wars (World War I and II) which ruined the British Empire and impoverished the British people. Capt. Grenfell carefully diagnosed British policy before the 20th century, and he presented a clear view of European diplomatic history from the time of the Franco-Prussian War through the 1950s. Grenfell’s brief but careful diagnosis gives readers a good background to both British and European History that causes one to think.
Grenfell provided a concise understanding of European events leading to German unity. Grenfell demolishes the myth of the Germans being “The Butcher Boy” of European History. For example, he cites the numerous incidents of French, British, Russian, etc. engaging in numerous wars of imperialism and/or Euroepan conflicts such as the Crimean War (1854-1856)during which the Germans did not participate.
Those who cite Frederick William I’s (1862-1888) and Bismarck’s wars of German unity as examples of German “aggression” do a bad day’s history. Bismarck knew that German disunity was the reason why the Germans were constantly facing invaders from the 16th century through part of the 19th century. For example, when Napolean I’s forces invaded Germany in 1806, the Germans were divided into over 300 political units including dukedoms, dutchies, principalities, free cities, etc. Bismarck also knew that such division could make the Germans vulnerable to future foreign intrusions. The Prussians, who eventually united the Germans, were involved in three small wars to unite Germany between 1863 and 1871. The combined time of these wars was less than a year. These wars for German unity were part of other wars and military actions for political unity in Europe and in North America. For example, the U.S. Civil War was a war of the North’s successful attempt to crush the Confederate attempt at succession. The Russians crushed Polish attempts at independence in 1830-1831 and again in 1863. The Italians were united for the first time since the disintegraion of the Ancient Roman Empire. German efforts at political unity were of shorter duration and less bloody than their European counterparts. One must notice the British bloody supression of the Sepoy Rebellion in India in 1857.
Grenfell made a very good case that as long as the British stayed out of European wars and focused on the Empire, British policy made sense. However, when Lord Grey who was the British Foreign Minister from 1906 to 1916 made secret agreements in 1906 and 1911 to commit British military forces to support the French against the Germans, he committed the British to disaster. Lord Grey made the incredibly stupid remark that if the British stayed out of the war, they would be despised. Once the British got into the war, they were dispised by the French anyway. One British commander stated that he and his fellow officers were derided by the French for not doing enough even though British troops died in droves fighting for France.
The official British excuse for declaring war on the Germans in late summer of 1914 was due to alleged German “aggression” in invading “neutral” Belgium. The facts are the British and French were in negotiations with the Belgium authorities to use Belgium as a point of invading the Germans. Once the Belgium authorities entered those negotiations, they were no longer neutral. The spark that provoked World War I was the mobiliation of the huge Russian army on Germany’s borders which the British encouraged highly encouraged knowing full well that this would start a general European war.
When World War I was over, the “victors” used the Franco-Prussian War as an example of alleged German aggression. They were embarrassed when the French ruler, Napolean III (1852-1870)openly admitted the French started that war, and in fact the French were the first to declare war. Documents do have a way of underminning conventional history. The Versailles Treaty (1919)was a stupid treaty which many on “the winning side” were quick to notice.
British and U.S. crusading before and during World War II showed the emptiness of British policy and Churchill empty rhetoric about conquering World Sin. The British made a guarantee to the Polish in 1939 which any sane man knew the British could not keep. Yet, such a guarantee was made, and neither the British nor the French did anything to help the Polish whom they had promised so faithfully to help.
After World War II was over, the British Empire collapsed. The British impoverished themselves fighting German Sin and now were subordinate to the Americans to fight Red Sin. During World War I, the British went from a creditor nation to a debtor almost overnight. When World War II ended, the British and still are an American welfare state.
What is amusing about British conditions after World War II is that Churchill promised that the British would fight and die for the Yugoslavians if they were invaded by the Soviets. How the British were going to do this when they could not even maintain law-and-order in Nortern Ireland is beyond comprehension. If such a war erupted, the Yugoslavians would have been the victims of the same kind of help the Polish got in 1939.
Grenfell made poignant comments about diplomats protecting their people’s interest. Yet, after World War II, the defeated West Germans were living better and eating better than the British who were part of the “winning side” and were now subsidizing their previous enemies. This says a lot about stupid foreign policy. Once German Sin was defeated, the British were facing the much greater threat from Soviet Red Sin. To demonstrate just how stupid British policy was, the British helped arm the Soviets to the teeth during World War II. One wonders just as Grenfell did in this book just how insane is any foreign policy that crusades for Heaven on Earth at any cost including the destruction of the planet.
One of the weaknesses of Grenfell’s book is that he omits Soviet diplomacy during the late 1930s. Grenfell could have enhanced his book by reporting Polish invasions of Lithuania and Czechoslovakia in 1938 which were reported in the U.S. press. He could have also exploited Russian and German moves in Eastern Europe in the late 1930s and Eastern European fears of Big Communism.
Yet, Grenfell wrote a solid book. The above mentioned omissions can be corrected by any alert reader who refers to books mentioned in Grenfell’s work. Grenfell gives a clear view of events leading to World War I and World War II which should be in textbooks but are not. Grenfell also makes logical sense out of complex diplomatic history which most current historians cannot or will not do.