Posted on 03/09/2008 8:14:15 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
Herr von Ribbentrop will see Viscount Halifax, British Foreign Secretary, on Thursday and also talk to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, although the purpose of his journey to London is ostensibly to wind up his affairs as Ambassador here.
Neither Mr. Chamberlain nor his advisers know whether Germany is ready to do business with Great Britain on a basis of give and take. They suspect that she is not. Chancellor Adolf Hitlers Reichstag speech was not exactly encouraging nor were the subsequent pronouncements of other Nazi leaders.
Yet the British Government has never been more anxious to reach an understanding with Germany, even if it must be bought at a stiff price. The British eagerness at the moment is much more than a smoke screen to conceal a possible anti-German purpose in the coming conversations at Rome.
If Mr. Chamberlain could get an Anglo-German agreement that would keep the peace in Europe for even a few years it would be worth more to him than an Anglo-Italian reconciliation. He knows that the differences between London and Berlin are more serious than those between London and Rome, but he wants to discover, at any rate, whether an Anglo-German deal is attainable and at what a cost.
The motives of Mr. Chamberlain and the British Conservatives in this quest are threefold: First is the obvious one of trying to stave off a war a little longer, perhaps avert it altogether. The second is to win a general election next Autumn or Winter, for the Conservative leaders honestly believe that an agreement with Italy and Germany will win them more votes with pacifist British subjects than all the principles for which Anthony Eden, former Foreign Minister, resigned a fortnight ago.
The most important of all is that Mr. Chamberlain and his colleagues are convinced that their present policy will give Great Britain a moral case in the eyes of her dominions and potential allies. In case a war comes, Mr. Chamberlain wants to be able to say that he did everything humanly possible to satisfy legitimate grievances while there was time.
The ruling Conservatives believe that if Great Britain refuses to negotiate with the dictators now, she will lack a moral case, such as that which she found so helpful in the United States and elsewhere in 1914. The dominion Prime Ministers apparently feel that same way, for as long ago as last June they urged the British Government to conciliate to the utmost.
Differences in political creed, they agreed at the Imperial Conference, should be no obstacle to friendly relations between governments and countries and nothing would be more damaging to the hopes of international appeasement than a division, real or apparent, of the world into opposing groups.
The so-called Chamberlain experiment, therefore, does not date from Mr. Edens resignation ore even from Viscount Halifaxs visit to Berlin, but from this decision of the entire British Commonwealth in the middle of last June, shortly before Mr. Chamberlains exchange of letters with Premier Benito Mussolini.
Personally, Herr von Ribbentrop is no more popular in London than when he greeted King George with a Nazi salute or called upon Great Britain to join an anti-Communist alliance. But the British Ministers will go out of their way to be polite to him this time, for he is now the Foreign Minister, with a formidable influence over German policy. They will not make an issue of the anti-British passages in Hitlers recent speech; they are in a mood to translate snubs into friendliness if they can.
The Germans have said that they do not want credits and do not want to bargain for advantages in Central Europe that they feel to be theirs by right. Experience has shown them that they can take what they wish in Central Europe without British permission, as long as they do it without bloodshed. They do want their colonies back and they also want what their official spokesman in Berlin yesterday described as a press pact agreement whereby the British Government would prevent newspapers here from telling unpleasant truths or untruths about Germany.
Even such a price would not be too steep for the negotiations if the Germans were willing to give something tangible in return some contribution to a general appeasement, as the British delicately put it. Mr. Chamberlain, perhaps, would not hesitate to give a colony or two if he felt that he was getting something genuine and desirable in return. As for a press pact, there are many ways for Great Britain to satisfy Germany on this score without a legislative enactment openly violating the freedom of the press.
In the financial crisis of 1931, in the Mediterranean emergency of 1935 and, above all, in the weeks preceding the abdication in 1936, the British press muzzled itself voluntarily with a docility that even the dictators might have envied. In each case the self-censorship was defended on patriotic grounds.
The Government pledged itself only yesterday not to enforce a censorship upon the free British press, but it would require only a discreet word from the Cabinet to the newspaper publishers for the powerful pro-Government newspapers to soft-pedal their criticisms of Germany. One would never know there had been any pressure; the Government would strenuously deny the existence of any censorship, and the newspapers would boast of their self-restraint. This is the way the thing has been done in present day Britain and it can be done again at any time.
Of course it would be difficult if not impossible to make the Labor and Liberal newspapers line up in this fashion. Some publishers who still value the freedom of the press would fight tooth and nail to keep their freedom and if any discreet request were made to them they would shout it from the housetops with out delay.
Mr. Chamberlain and his colleagues could at least assure the Germans that all the solid and reliable newspapers were behaving themselves. And to make assurance doubly sure Mr. Chamberlain could always make a statement in the Commons appealing to this press to show restraint in dealing with international problems. If this is all the Germans want they can have it as far as Mr. Chamberlain is concerned.
Already the government is doing its utmost to discourage public discussion of international affairs by shutting down on the normal sources of news in Downing Street and at Westminster. The usual channels of official information have dried up in the past two or three weeks. The contacts that used to be so valuable to newspaper men have all but vanished. A young Under-Secretary will soon be answering most of the questions on foreign affairs in the House of Commons while the Foreign Secretary sits in the House of Lords.
Truly, things are much changed since Herr von Ribbentrop made his debut in London. He will find tomorrow that despite all his blunders as an Ambassador the British are ready to do business with him if he and his master will reciprocate.
A Communist procession of between 300 and 400 late tonight congested traffic in Piccadilly Circus marching behind a band and drums, chanting, Ribbentrop must go.
Later a speaker shouted that although Herr von Ribbentrop missed the demonstration through postponing his departure from Berlin, the Communists intended to make him hear their voices wherever he went in London. The German Embassy was strongly guarded.
The motives of Mr. Chamberlain and the British Conservatives in this quest are threefold: First is the obvious one of trying to stave off a war a little longer, perhaps avert it altogether. The second is to win a general election next Autumn or Winter, for the Conservative leaders honestly believe that an agreement with Italy and Germany will win them more votes with pacifist British subjects than all the principles for which Anthony Eden, former Foreign Minister, resigned a fortnight ago.
The most important of all is that Mr. Chamberlain and his colleagues are convinced that their present policy will give Great Britain a moral case in the eyes of her dominions and potential allies. In case a war comes, Mr. Chamberlain wants to be able to say that he did everything humanly possible to satisfy legitimate grievances while there was time.
Gotta keep the pacifists happy.
An ambulance purchased for the Spanish Loyalists with funds raised through Federated Faculty Committees for Aid to Spain was displayed yesterday on the City College campus. Seventy-five students attended a noon-hour meeting in behalf of the fund and donated $6.
The vehicle, which is painted blue, has appeared on many of the college campuses in the metropolitan area and is scheduled to visit Sarah Lawrence College today.
John K. Ackley, recorder of the college, and Seymour Copstein of the Department of English urged the student body to support the Loyalist cause in Spain. Student speakers sounded the same keynote.
BERLIN, March 8 (AP). Alarm against the continued prosperity of Jewish firms in Germany, despite four years of Nazi effort to crowd them out, was sounded today by the Stuermer, weekly organ of Julius Striecher, Germanys No. 1 Jew-baiter.
The Stuermer demanded to know if aristocrats deliberately were trying to support Jews.
It printed a long list of regular customers of a large Jewish-owned Berlin department store containing many names of aristocratic families and government employees.
Reply #2 has two shorties from 3/9/38.
Oops. I forgot to paste in the names.
Thank you very much for these ‘time capsules’. They serve to remind us of our own limitations.
“The ruling Conservatives believe that if Great Britain refuses to negotiate with the dictators now, she will lack a moral case, such as that which she found so helpful in the United States and elsewhere in 1914. The dominion Prime Ministers apparently feel that same way, for as long ago as last June they urged the British Government to conciliate to the utmost.”
I consider this statement extraordinary, but it makes sense.
In the First World War, Britain’s own army was more than doubled in size by contributions from its empire, and from the US. So Chamberlain’s concern to make absolutely certain that these folks would be on board once again, when war finally came, would be more than understandable.
And if that required Neville to play the fool to Adolf... well, so be it.
On the other hand, I think most historians strongly suspect that Neville really LIKED being a fool.
Has anyone ever argued otherwise?
Our future with Obama as President.
So English departments have been hotbeds of Communism since the 1930s.
Chamberlain played the fool so well that he became one. But it is not exclusively his fault — a lot of people believed in wishful thinking rather than in the unpleasant facts. Some things never change.
I feel a certain amount of sympathy for poor old Neville. In 1938 we were not quite twenty years past the World War. In 2008 we are over thirty years past our Vietnam experience. Now compare the casualties from those two events. Our 58,000 dead in Vietnam over ten years or so would have amounted to a fairly good month for the Allies in WWI. Yet the anti-war types are still using Vietnam as a rallying issue to this day. If I was a Brit in 1938 I would have required a lot of convincing before I would be willing to go to the continent of Europe to fight the Hun. Threats to Austria and Czechoslovakia would not have done it. I realize it is a leader's job to anticipate emerging problems and convince the people of the need to take painful steps when necessary, but for Chamberlain it would have been a tall order. Especially in a democracy, where the leader first has to be elected. Hitler and Stalin didn't have such constraints.
I recently read Radical Son, David Horowitz's autobiography. The way he tells it public schools were hotbeds of communism in the 1930s. They still thought Marx/Lenin/Stalin represented a happy future for the working stiff.
3/9/38 is also the day Chancellor Kurt von Schuschnigg of Austria called for a plebiscite on March 13th to determine whether Austria should remain independent or join Austria. Hitler didn’t think that was a good idea on such short notice.
Added to which, the year’s delay bought time for Britain to build at least the foundation of credible war-fighting forces, especially the air force - without which, in 1938, war might have been near suicical. Perhaps not quite such a fool after all.
So how did the talks go?
Ironically Ribbentrop was an agent for Johnnie Walker whisky (a product born in Kilmarnock, Ayrshire) before becoming a Nazi...
"On March 9, Ribbentrop, the new German Foreign Minister, had arrived in London to wind up his affairs at the embassy, where he had been ambassador. He had long talks with Chamberlain, Halifax, the King and the Archbishop of Canterbury. His impressions of the British Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary, he reported back to Berlin, were "very good." After a long conference with Lord Halifax, Ribbentrop reported directly to Hitler on March 10 as to what Britain would do "if the Austrian question cannot be settled peacefully." Basically he was convinced from his London talks "that England will do nothing in regard to Austria.""
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, Pg 344
And Heinrich Himmler was a chicken farmer. Goering was a pilot for a Swedish airline, or something like that. They were a bunch of amateurs.
“Added to which, the years delay bought time for Britain to build at least the foundation of credible war-fighting forces, especially the air force - without which, in 1938, war might have been near suicical. Perhaps not quite such a fool after all.”
I’ve seen this argued both ways. Some say the Germans actually gained more from that extra year, and were more formadable in 1939 than they would have been in 1938.
Niall Ferguson, in his 2006 book, “The War of the World” paints a picture of the British government almost literally quaking in their boots at the thought of possibly provoking Hitler.
On page 323, he notes, for example:
“Incredibly, the army’s budget was actually cut in the wake of the Austrian Anschluss. Things were no better by the time of the Munich crisis. It was not until February 1939 that the idea of a European expeditionary force was revived, and even at that late juncture it was to be composed of just six regular and four territorial divisions.”
— At a time when Hitler was preparing over 100 divisions for Poland.
Next Ferguson heaps scorn on ideas for the new British air force, and caps it off with:
“In 1938 the [British] Chiefs of Staff ruled out even ‘staff conversations’ with the French, since the very term ‘has a sinister purport and gives an impression ... of mutually assumed military collaboration.’ Perish the thought!” Says Ferguson.
Sorry, Winnie, but historians are not kind, not kind at all to Neville boy.
Wow - peace in our time! I can hardly wait for the Obamanation to get to work.
It is easy for historians with hindsight to condemn Chamberlain’s appeasement policy. But I agree with Homer J’s assessment and sympathy.
You single out Chamberlain as the fool, but he was not the only national leader who could have stood up to German/Italian/Japanese aggression and failed to do so.
Millions of people around the world in the 1930s wanted like Chamberlain to avoid another world war. After all, it kept the USA out of the war until attacked by Japan late in 1941.
You could at least give Chamberlain some credit for declaring war in September 1939 when he finally realised that something had to be done to stop Hitler.
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