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Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World Kindle Edition

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 936 ratings

Were World Wars I and II inevitable? Were they necessary wars? Or were they products of calamitous failures of judgment?

In this monumental and provocative history, Patrick Buchanan makes the case that, if not for the blunders of British statesmen– Winston Churchill first among them–the horrors of two world wars and the Holocaust might have been avoided and the British Empire might never have collapsed into ruins. Half a century of murderous oppression of scores of millions under the iron boot of Communist tyranny might never have happened, and Europe’s central role in world affairs might have been sustained for many generations.

Among the British and Churchillian errors were:
• The secret decision of a tiny cabal in the inner Cabinet in 1906 to take Britain straight to war against Germany, should she invade France
• The vengeful Treaty of Versailles that mutilated Germany, leaving her bitter, betrayed, and receptive to the appeal of Adolf Hitler
• Britain’s capitulation, at Churchill’s urging, to American pressure to sever the Anglo-Japanese alliance, insulting and isolating Japan, pushing her onto the path of militarism and conquest
• The greatest mistake in British history: the unsolicited war guarantee to Poland of March 1939, ensuring the Second World War

Certain to create controversy and spirited argument,
Churchill, Hitler, and “the Unnecessary War” is a grand and bold insight into the historic failures of judgment that ended centuries of European rule and guaranteed a future no one who lived in that vanished world could ever have envisioned.
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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Taking his swing at the origins of World War II, conservative pundit Buchanan incorporates the subject into his warnings, expressed in several populist jeremiads (State of Emergency, 2006), of the decline of the West. Certainly World War I, with which Buchanan begins, was a catastrophe for Western civilization whose ramifications continue to be felt. Buchanan’s interpretation generally holds that British and American participation in both WWI and WWII was avoidable if British leaders had recognized that Germany was no threat to the vital interests of the British Empire. Banking his thesis on such supposed benevolence from Wilhelm II and Adolf Hitler, Buchanan criticizes various British policies of the 1920s and 1930s (who doesn’t?), and argues collaterally with Hitler’s statements disclaiming fundamental conflicts with Britain. The weakness in Buchanan’s line of thinking, of course, is that by 1939, Hitler’s international word was worthless; yet Buchanan hinges his case on what might have happened had Britain let Hitler go after Poland in 1939 as it had Czechoslovakia. Speculating a better future had the West permitted Nazi Germany a free hand in Eastern Europe, Buchanan cites the historical costs of Britain and France having at last drawn the line against aggression. Convinced? Controversial as is his wont, Buchanan reminds his large readership that the immediate ignition of WWII can still be disputed. --Gilbert Taylor

About the Author

PATRICK J. BUCHANAN was a senior adviser to three American presidents; ran twice for the Republican presidential nomination, in 1992 and 1996; and was the Reform Party candidate in 2000. The author of nine other books, including the bestsellers Right from the Beginning; A Republic, Not an Empire; The Death of the West; State of Emergency; and Day of Reckoning, Buchanan is a syndicated columnist and founding member of three of America’s foremost public affairs shows: NBC’s The McLaughlin Group and CNN’s The Capital Gang and Crossfire. He is now a senior political analyst for MSNBC.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0011UGM3W
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Forum Books (May 27, 2008)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 27, 2008
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 15213 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 560 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 936 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
936 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book insightful and provocative. They describe it as a well-written, readable, and important history book. Readers praise the author's careful research and historical explanations.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

79 customers mention "Insight"79 positive0 negative

Customers find the book insightful and thought-provoking. They say it provides comparisons to the US current challenges. The author provides an impeccably researched and highly readable critical analysis. The book opens with a captivating and accurate statement, providing a critical piece to the puzzle. It is logical, well-written, and well-referenced.

"...This is a truly fascinating insight which in my opinion is the major contribution of this book...." Read more

"...This book manages to flesh out the geopolitical complexities of dealing with Hitler giving context to diplomatic actions taken by Britain during..." Read more

"...Buchanan is no historian, but he has read a lot of history. This book is logical, well written, and well referenced...." Read more

"...tome on answering that question, but it does provide a critical piece to the puzzle, and perhaps more importantly, provides the reader with links..." Read more

70 customers mention "Readability"64 positive6 negative

Customers find the book readable and engaging. They say it's an important history book that should be read by everyone. The book is described as interesting, provocative, and enjoyable. Readers mention it's a textbook-quality review of the actions and hidden details.

"...This book is interesting, readable, and provocative...." Read more

"...despite being a great admirer of Churchill, I believe this is an important book that should be read by anyone interested in this period of history...." Read more

"...The book is an easy read, which is remarkable given the large number of references (sometimes conflicting) used by the author...." Read more

"...the author has produced a provocative and worthwhile work, deserving of wide readership." Read more

35 customers mention "Writing quality"30 positive5 negative

Customers find the book well-written, readable, and engaging. They appreciate the author's clear presentation of the case, the thorough research, and the helpful annotations. The book provides an insightful and provocative look at geopolitics, offering a compelling explanation of the issues.

"...This book is interesting, readable, and provocative...." Read more

"...Buchanan writes clearly and engagingly...." Read more

"...About 2/3'rds is a well written account of the diplomacy of the world wars, or better said, the mistaken diplomacy which led to those wars, and..." Read more

"...Here's why I love this book:1. The writing is superb - I found the book easy to read, and hard to put down.2...." Read more

19 customers mention "Historical accuracy"19 positive0 negative

Customers find the book's historical accuracy fascinating and well-crafted. They say it provides a different perspective on history from a well-sourced narrative that ties together various source materials.

"...not just a rant against Churchill - it is also an excellent history of the motivations and events that lead up to WWII...." Read more

"...But the book also includes very interesting historical facts and tidbits that some readers may be unaware of. Some of these include:*..." Read more

"...This book is so vital as an historical work because it illustrates in tragic detail the origins of these two world wars, the damage they caused and..." Read more

"This book is incredibly well sourced and tells the story of the wars from a perspective most have never considered" Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2010
    In this excellent piece, Pat Buchanan makes some excellent points which conflict with the conventional wisdom about some of the most important events of the Twentieth Century. Many readers will disagree and perhaps even be offended by Buchanan's analysis. However, the author rigorously annotates his points, not just in footnotes but quotes of primary sources in the text of the book. Most readers have doubtless made up their minds about the causes of World Wars I and II. This book will, at the very least, challenge most readers to re-examine many of their opinions. While I do not accept all of Mr. Buchanan's arguments, they are worthy of respect, and can shake up one's settled beliefs.

    The first theme that Mr. Buchanan challenges is the notion that the First World War was essentially the product of German and Austrian aggression against the reluctant Allied Powers. While Austria is seen as the unwise bully that it was, Mr. Buchanan points out that in his 25 years as the German Kaiser, neither Kaiser Wilhelm or his nation had been involved in a single war. Britain, by contrast, had fought ten wars during this period including the bloody and recent Boer War. France had been involved in numerous bloody colonial wars as well. Buchanan provides copious evidence that the Kaiser was trying to avert war even at the eleventh hour, and that Britain could, and should, have averted war by simply refusing to commit to a war in continental Europe.

    Regarding this first theme, Winston Churchill comes in for savage criticism by Buchanan. Buchanan's theme is that Churchill's appetite and ardent desire for war was pivotal in causing England to guaranty Belgium's defense, which guaranty very likely made war inevitable.

    Buchanan documents in depressing detail the utter fecklessness of European diplomacy both before and after the First World War. Those who feel it necessary to take heed of the opinion of the elites of these countries would do well to study this component of the book. Buchanan documents, as have others before him, that both the First and Second World Wars are primarily the product of wretchedly incompetent management of international relations on the part of Britain, France, Germany, and others.

    Buchanan's main themes continue unto the Second World War. His main thesis is that it was Britain's guaranty to go to war if Germany attacked Poland that triggered the global war. He makes a strong case that this guaranty put the question of global war into the hands of a Polish government which immediately became intransigent once it received this guaranty. Buchanan believes that Hitler would have accepted terms over the question of Danzig and the Polish Corridor that Poland otherwise could, (and, he says, should) have found acceptable. Danzig was, after all, formerly a part of Germany until the Versailles Treaty, and its inhabitants almost to a person desired to be part of Germany. Given the facts that at the time Britain had only two battle-ready divisions, a minuscule air force, and that its Navy could not influence any German-Polish conflict in a meaningful way, Buchanan argues that the guaranty was essentially inexplicable.

    Once again, Buchanan savages Winston Churchill, who was again instrumental in causing Britain to make the guaranty that Buchanan believes triggered "the unnecessary war."

    Most readers, myself included, will not buy all of Buchanan's arguments. Regarding the fecklessness of European diplomacy, and the causes of the First World War, I think that Buchanan is on solid ground. Other researchers before Buchanan have found the First World War to have been an avoidable tragedy that the European states should have been able to avoid. Buchanan's Second World War arguments are somewhat more problematic. There is little evidence that any country anytime ever had much luck negotiating with Hitler, and it is far from clear that Britain's guaranty caused the German-Polish conflict or that its absence would have prevented it. Hitler seemed willing to invade neighboring countries on almost any pretext and with a complete disregard to ordinary Western standards of decency. Notwithstanding that fact, Buchanan makes a pretty good case that Hitler was an opportunist, and that he was not without justification in seeking return of the Sudetenland and of Bohemia. Had he stopped there, and negotiated return of Danzig without war (which Buchanan says would have happened absent the British guaranty) we might be living in a very different world. Who can say?

    Personally, I still think that Hitler was determined to fight a bloody war against Russia and persecute the Jews and other nationalities and ethnicities that he hated. Ultimately, it seems that Hitler was bound to fight such a war, but Buchanan makes some case that the world might have been better had Germany and Russia fought their war without the Western Allies being involved. Each reader must decide for him or her self. I don't accept this thesis.

    Mr. Buchanan's most insightful analysis is at the very end of this piece. He argues, as discussed above, that inept European diplomacy in which Great Powers went to war for non-vital reasons, was the cause of the World Wars. He then contrasts this with US diplomacy from World War I to the end of the Cold War. During this time American leaders refused to be easily drawn into conflicts and joined the World Wars only in their latter stages (particularly the First) thereby avoiding in significant degree, the horrendous casualties that many others suffered. Even more significantly, once America became the leading world power, American diplomacy repeatedly avoided war-starting confrontations by refusing, not without anguish, to fight wars for non-vital interests to America. Hence America's refusal to fight wars over Soviet interventions in Czechoslovakia and Hungary, or even the Cuban Missile Crisis. The contrast between the success of America in winning the Cold War without a World War (albeit with some sizable errors such as Vietnam) and European fecklessness in managing to start two world wars in 25 years, is stark. This is a truly fascinating insight which in my opinion is the major contribution of this book.

    This book is interesting, readable, and provocative. It will cause most readers to at the very least re-examine what they think about the causes of the two great wars of the Twentieth Century. For that, this one merits five stars. Highly recommended. RJB.
    52 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2008
    What is it about popular opinion that ossifies the mind making it impervious to view points that do not conform to the prevailing orthodoxy. Buchanan has been vilified here and elsewhere for daring to suggest that in order to understand the calamities of the 20th century one must revisit the World War I.

    He has dared to suggest that the Hun may not have been exclusively guilty for World War I and that the costs of World War II can be attributed to the titanic political failures of British statesmanship throughout the first 40 years of the 20th century. He does not exonerate the Germans, merely points out the other side of the story.

    No one comes under more scathing criticism than Winston Churchill who has long been one of my heroes (I felt for instance he should have been named man of the century by Time magazine). Churchill, when his country was careening towards the precipice of WWI was positively giddy with excitement overwhelming cooler heads in the Cabinet at the time.

    For daring to suggest an alternative perspective Buchanan has been smeared as an anti-Semite, a Germanophile, a Holocaust denier, a hater, a bigot, a racist - you name it, the left has pulled out the stops to discredit him.

    But, despite being a great admirer of Churchill, I believe this is an important book that should be read by anyone interested in this period of history. Buchanan writes clearly and engagingly. Even if you don't agree with everything Buchanan says, I certainly do not, this book is certain to shake up your thinking.

    Buchanan asks at the beginning of the book why European world hegemony was destroyed over 30 years at the beginning of the 20th century. Throughout the book he reminds us of the costs in lives, treasure and cultural confidence of the European 30 year war (World Wars I & II).

    Buchanan does enjoy the benefit of 20/20 hindsight and exploits that advantage relentlessly. I also am of the opinion that Buchanan gives short shrift to the "other side of the argument." He is also not above a little distortion. For just one instance, Churchill made the comment that WWII was "an unnecessary war" and Buchanan uses that comment to buttress his argument that the war was unnecessary which is not at all what Churchill was saying. Churchill was saying that had we intervened EARLIER that the war could have been avoided. Also, had the Allies addressed the legitimate grievances raised by the Versailles Treaty we could have eliminated the seething resentment of the German people.

    Buchanan never suggests that Hitler was not an odious despicable creature or that he should have been allowed to dominate the European continent but rather that the Allies, through their alliance with Poland created a "trip wire" that served only to undermine the interests of Britain, France and the United States. Instead, Germany should have been allowed to dissipate her energies to the East with the dual scourges of the 20th century destroying one another. Buchanan is not a Hitler apologist, but simply suggests that there were better ways to deal with Hitler than the diplomatic choices that were made.

    From the book: "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 part of Europe where it had no vital interests, committing itself to a war it could not win. . . . In the Great War, Britain, France, Russia, Italy, Japan and the United States put together almost failed to prevent Germany from occupying Paris. Now, without Russia or America, and with Japan and Italy hostile, Britain and France were going to keep the German army out of Warsaw. . . . Britain a half-year earlier had resisted going to war for a faraway country with democratic institutions, well-armed military forces, and strong fortifications (Czechoslovakia), now promised to go to war for a dictatorship with less-than-modern armed forces and wide-open frontiers."

    I recommend this book very highly despite it's controversial perspective. This book manages to flesh out the geopolitical complexities of dealing with Hitler giving context to diplomatic actions taken by Britain during this period. My only suggestion is to avoid the temptation to "pile on" and pigeon hole Buchanan as a Holocaust denier and anti-Semite. For the record, neither, in my opinion, is true.
    126 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Truth Teller
    5.0 out of 5 stars A very good read and easy to comprehend
    Reviewed in Canada on June 18, 2018
    A very good read and easy to comprehend. One criticism is that the author wasn't hard enough of the war criminal Churchill. Churchill was a major player in World War One, try reading HIdden History: The Secret Origins of the First World War where the actions of not only Churchill but Lloyd George too. Churchill wanted war with Germany from 1933 onwards, Churchill and his Focus group were monumenal in starting the Second World War. Try reading Churchill' War by David Irving. He was instrumental in the beligerence of Czechoslovakia and receiving payments from Benes from 1934 on. Still we are getting off the topic of this excellent book. The comments and wants of Churchill are the product of a sick and twisted mind. There is mention in the book of Churchill being Chancellor of the Exchequer and being responsible for the 1926 General Strike. Twice in his political did Churchill use the Royal Navy to break strikes. He shot down striking miners on the docks in Liverpool with rifle fire and 11 years later use cannon on ships to kill strikers. The man was deranged. Hitler was condemned and quite rightly so but Churchill was as bad or even worse than Hitler in his disregard of human life as he showed starving millions of Indians in the Bengal Famine and half a million Greeks following the British Army being ejected from Greece. Neither Chamberlain or Churchill ever worked for peace prior to September 1st 1939, they discouraged a Polish representative being sent to Germany at the end of August. Stalin too was another deranged politician who murdered far more than Churchill or Hitler but he is showered with praise in this book. I'm not a National Socialist but Churchill was inspiration for any warmonger or mass murderer. He was responsible for starting the bombing of civilians sending many RAF bombing raids before Hitler responded in kind.
  • Hello You
    5.0 out of 5 stars The most important 20th Century history book
    Reviewed in France on October 4, 2019
    Finally, someone has written the real history of the 20th Century. I was going to write this book, until I read it and realised that it had already been written. Pat Buchanan was a heavyweight US politician who never quite made it to the top of his profession. As a historian, he follows the Tom Wolfe approach, keeping the intellectual content low-grade, and ramming the message home through repetition and many quotes from more academic historians. In the end, he relies on secondary sources, but a wide selection including the blue peter types like Ian Kershaw as well as the disgraced but more original David Irving.
    His only real faults are to ignore the financial aspects as well as the psychological. Churchill was half american, and obsessed with his american mother who ignorerd him and carried out well-publicised affairs with Germans. This part of the book still needs to be written. Meanwhile, Adam Tooze and Liaquat Ahamed have writted the financial accounts of the two great wars, in Lords of Finance and the Wages of Destruction. The three books taken together give a complete understanding of the 20th Century.
    Pat Buchanan does suffer from some other faults. He is American, and believes in freedom and democracy. He still sees the Russians and Soviets as instigators of terror. While this is sometimes true, it is not due to their race or politics, but to their situation. In any case, given that this is a revisionist history, it is a masterpiece.
  • David Bird
    5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinarily good book
    Reviewed in Australia on January 2, 2024
    Excellent book for history buffs. Explains critical aspects of this period in our history that are often overlooked.
  • Raimundo Da Costa Moura
    5.0 out of 5 stars As verdadeiras causas das duas guerras mundiais
    Reviewed in Brazil on March 5, 2016
    Excelente. Um fato histórico visto por um lado neutro e não pela visão dos vencedores. Mostra como o desconhecimento de fatos históricos nos leva a repetir erros com prejuízos incalculáveis
  • Herbert Sowa
    5.0 out of 5 stars alternative Geschichtsbetrachtung
    Reviewed in Germany on January 17, 2013
    Ein sehr interessantes und lesenswertes Buch des amerikanischen Politikers und ehemaligen Präsidentschaftskandidaten Pat Buchanan. Ich empfehle übrigens die Lektüre auf Englisch, Buchanan schreibt in einer sehr feinen Sprache.
    Das Buch liefert keine neuen Fakten und ist aus Sekundärliteratur geschrieben, aber Buchanan nimmt eine alternative Inerpretation der Geschichte der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts vor.

    Buchanan ist weit davon entfernt, Hitler und den Nationalsozialismus zu verklären oder zu verharmlosen. Dass Hitler ein Staatsmann ohne jede Moral war, wird von Buchanan in keiner Weise bestritten und zieht sich als roter Faden durch Buchanans Ausführungen.

    Buchanan stellt die These auf, dass das zweimalige Eingreifen Englands gegen Deutschland 1914 und 1939/40, bei der in beiden Fällen Winston Churchill in federführender Weise beteiligt war, aus der Sicht Englands wie auch Europas und des Westens als Fehler einzustufen ist. Spätere Generationen werden die beiden Kriege noch viel stärker als heute als Bürgerkrieg des Westens einstufen, mit dem der Anfang des Abstieges begann.

    Buchanan holt bei seiner Argumentation weit aus und geht zurück bis in die Vorgeschichte des ersten Weltkrieges. Auch die Geschichte des dritten Reiches wird in allen Facetten (wie zum Beispiel Nacht der langen Messer oder Hitlers Antisemitismus/Reichspogromnacht) nacherzählt. Der Autor verwahrt sich so vermutlich gegen einen etwaigen Vorwurf eines zu engen Blickwinkels.

    Hauptkritikpunkt Buchanans ist Chamberlains Garantieerklärung für Polen vom 31.03.1939. Diese sei völlig konträr zum Interesse des britischen Weltreiches gewesen, zumal England gar nicht in der Lage war Polen wirklich zu unterstützen. Die Garantieerklärung sei zudem moralisch auch keinesfalls indiziert gewesen; bei Polen handelte es sich um einen expansionistisch orientierten Staat,der beim Zerfall der Tschechoslowakei mitprofitieren wollte (Annexion von Teschen), regiert von einer Militärjunta, ein Staat,der die Minderheiten im Land massivst mishandelte. (Die Konnexität zwischen der Garantieerklärung Engalnds gegenüber Polen und der Verschärfung der Verfolgung der Deutschen Minderheit in Polen wird von Buchanan noch nicht mal erläutert; hier wären Buchanans Ausführungen sogar noch zu ergänzen.)

    Für Buchanan war die englische Garantieerklärung letztlich nichts anderes als die Garantie für den Krieg.

    Durch Englands Allianz mit Stalin sei das halbe Europa einer Diktatur unterworfen worden, die Massenmorde in weit größerem Ausmaße begangen habe im Vergleich mit Hitler. Der Völkermord an den Juden durch Hitler wäre im Falle des Nichteingreifens Englands und der USA möglicherweise geringer an Umfang gewesen, hier bezieht sich Buchanan auf Hitlers Reichstagsrede vom 30. Januar 1939. Zu dieser Thematik hätte ich mir allerdings etwas ausführlichere Darlegungen Buchanans gewünscht.

    Durch ein Nichteingreifen Englands wäre der Westfeldzug wie auch die Besetzung Westeuropas und Griechenlands durch Hitler nicht erforderlich gewesen. Unvermeidbar gewesen wäre wohl der Krieg zwischen Deutschland und der Sowjetunion, dies entsprach ja Hitlers Programmatik schon in Mein Kampf. Ob der Krieg auch in jedem Falle Stalins Absicht war, damit beschäftigt sich Buchanan nicht. Doch unabhängig vom Ausgang dieses Krieges wäre das britischen Weltreich im Falle des Nichteingreifens unversehrt geblieben und hätte wahrscheinlich noch länger bestanden.

    In diesem Zusammenhang richtet sich Buchanans Kritik an den Fähigkeiten Churchills als Staatsmann, unangefochten seien lediglich Churchills Fähigkeiten als Kriegsherr. Die moralische Integrität Churchills wird von Buchanan bestritten. Churchill war einer der maßgeblichen Initiatoren der Hungerblockade gegen Deutschland im ersten Weltkrieg und deren Verlängerung nach Abschluss des Waffenstillstandes.
    Weiter nennt Buchanan Churchills Vorgabe einer gezielten Bombardierung der Zivilbevölkerung mit Amtsantritt am 10.Mai 1940, die ausgesprochen wurde, lange bevor die deutsche Luftwaffe entsprechende Taktiken anwandte. Außerdem Churchills Vorschlag, deutsche Weideflächen mit Milzbranderregern verseuchen zu lassen, um die deutscche Bevölkerung über Rindfleisch zu vergiften (wurde nicht ausgeführt); außerdem Churchills vorläufige Zustimmung zum Morgenthauplan im Herbst 1944 und seine "Aufteilung" Europas mit Stalin und damit der Verrat unter anderem an Polen, für das doch Großbritannien angeblich in den Krieg gezogen sei. Folgen dieser "Aufteilung" war nicht zuletzt die Vertreibung von 11 Millionen Deutschen mit 2 Millionen Todesopfern.

    Das Buch ist in jedem Fall im Sinne einer kritischen Geschichtsbetrachtung zu empfehlen, Buchanans vornehm abwägender Stil (in der englischen Originalausgabe) lässt den Leser den Lesestoff mit Leichtigkeit durchdringen.

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