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To: iowamark

Very interesting


2 posted on 05/10/2015 10:36:20 PM PDT by StoneWall Brigade (And I will send fire on Magog- Ezkiel 39:6)
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To: StoneWall Brigade

The vote for Labour in 1945 was not a vote against Churchill but against the Conservative Party, which had come to powder in 1935.


3 posted on 05/10/2015 11:15:48 PM PDT by RobbyS (quotes)
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To: StoneWall Brigade

According to British historian John Lukas, at cabinet meeting during the first weeks after of Churchill was appointed PM Lord Halifax pushed hard for Britain to negotiate a peace treaty with Hitler. Churchill pushed back and his strongest support came from Neville Chamberlin.


6 posted on 05/11/2015 3:35:19 AM PDT by ozdragon
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To: StoneWall Brigade
Quite the complicated situation. At the time Churchill took power he was leading the country to fight against long odds. It was only Hitler’s Operation Barbarossa - the invasion of Russia - which diluted the threat of immediate invasion of Britain. The defeat of the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain was a close-run thing, and would not have happened without the diversion of the German attacks from the RAF to the British civil population. And that might not have happened but for the RAF’s attacks on German civilians, which followed putatively accidental bombing of British civilians. Both the British, who failed to pick the right horse when they didn’t significantly back the RAF’s Frank Whittle in his jet engine work, and Hitler when he didn’t allow the Me 262 to be developed as a fighter but insisted on a bomber version - blundered in ways that could have completely changed the air war.

Churchill claimed that he didn’t want American troops but only American materiel in order to defeat the Nazis, was not honest about the actual situation.

Meanwhile FDR was more interested in the fate of the USSR than anything else. He began harassing German U-boats in international waters after the start of Barbarossa.

But FDR committed the US to production mobilization immediately upon the Fall of France in mid-1940. That was when Churchill sent all Britain’s military technology to the US, including the blueprints for the Merlin aircraft engine, radar, Frank Whittle’s turbine, and other things.

7 posted on 05/11/2015 12:12:55 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion ('Liberalism' is a conspiracy against the public by wire-service journalism.)
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