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http://www.mises.org
February 29,
2004
Adam Young
The Real
Churchill
On February 4th, President Bush
eulogized the life of Winston Churchill. The president
described Winston Churchill as a "great man" and quickly
zeroed in on the mistress that both Bush and Churchill
share: war. "He was a prisoner in the Boer War, a
controversial strategist in the Great War. He was the
rallying voice of the Second World War, and a prophet of the
Cold War." Indeed, there doesn't seem to have been a war -
or an opportunity for war - that Churchill wasn't associated
with during his long career.
Bush also recited Churchill's famous
retort that "History will be kind to me, for I intend to
write it" adding that "history has been kind
to Winston Churchill, as it usually is to those who help
save the world," surely hoping that history will be kind to
George W. Bush.
Except this history is a myth. The
truth about the real Churchill - the Churchill that few know
- is that he was "a man of the state: of the welfare state
and of the warfare state" in Professor Ralph Raico's
turn-of-phrase. The truth about Winston Churchill is that he
was a menace to liberty, and a disaster for Britain, for
Europe, for the United States of America, and for Western
Civilization itself.
Not since fictional personages like
Hercules and Zeus, have so many myths been attached to one
man. As we will see, the Winston Churchill we're told about
is not the Churchill known to honest history, but rather a
fictional version of the man and his actions. And these
words and actions have produced our mainstream "patriotic
political myths" as John Denson calls them, which
are merely the victor's wartime lies and propaganda scripted
into the 'Official History.' The Churchill mythology is
challenged by honest history, and the reality about
Churchill involves hard, but necessary truths.
Churchill the Opportunist
Of course, central to the neocon mythology built up
around their almost deified idealization of Churchill is
that he fought for (in Bush's words comparing Tony Blair to
Churchill), "the right thing, and not the easy thing," right
over popularity, principle over opportunism.
Except that isn't true. Churchill
was above all a man who craved power, and a man who craves
power, craves opportunity to advance himself no matter what
the cost.
When Churchill entered politics,
many took note of his unique rhetorical talents, which gave
him power over men, but it also came with a powerful failing
of its own. During WWII, Robert Menzies, the Prime Minister
of Australia, noted of Churchill "His real tyrant is the
glittering phrase so attractive to his mind that awkward
facts have to give way."
However, Churchill had other
failings as well. The Spectator newspaper said of Churchill
upon his appointment as First Lord of the Admiralty in 1911:
"We cannot detect in his career any principles or even any
constant outlook upon public affairs; his ear is always to
the ground; he is the true demagogue. . . ."
The great English classical liberal
John Morley, after working with Churchill, passed a succinct
appraisal of him, "Winston," he said, "has no
principles."
Entering politics in 1900, Churchill
(the grandson of a Duke and son of a prominent Tory)
naturally joined the governing Conservative party. Then in
1904, he left the Conservatives andjoined the Liberal party,
and when they were in decline Churchill dumped them and
rejoined the Conservatives, uttering his famous quote "It's
one thing to rat, it's another to re-rat." Churchill
allegedly made his move to the Liberals on the issue of free
trade. However, Robert Rhodes James, a Churchill admirer,
wrote: "It was believed [at the time], probably
rightly, that if Arthur Balfour had given him office in
1902, Churchill would not have developed such a burning
interest in free trade and joined the Liberals." Clive
Ponting also notes that ". . .he had already admitted to
Rosebery, he was looking for an excuse to defect from a
party that seemed reluctant to recognize his talents." Since
the Liberals would not accept a protectionist, Churchill had
to change his tune.
It's not a surprise that this
neoconservative administration and its apologists in the
tamed media laud and venerate Churchill, for he was as
President Bush described him; a man who was synonymous with
war. Churchill loved war. In 1925, he wrote, "The story of
the human race is war." This is untrue, but Churchill
lacked any grasp of the fundamentals of true, classical
liberalism. The story of the human race is increasing
peaceful cooperation and the efforts by some to stop it
through war. However, for Churchill, periods without war
offered nothing but "the bland skies of peace and
platitude."
Without principles or scruples,
Churchill as a prominent member of the Liberal party
government naturally played a role in the hijacking of
liberalism from its roots in individualism, laissez-faire,
free trade and bourgeois morality, to its transformation
into the "New Liberalism" as a proxy for socialism and the
omnipotent state in Britain and in America.
Churchill was also a famous opponent
of Communism and of Bolshevism in particular. One of the
reasons why Churchill admired Italian Fascism was Churchill
believed that Mussolini had found a formula that would
neutralize the appeal of communism, namely super-nationalism
with a social welfarist appeal. This is a domestic formula
for power that still appeals today, if the Bush
Administration is any indication. Churchill went so far as
to say that Fascism "proved the necessary antidote to the
Communist poison."
Then came 1941. Churchill made his
peace with Communism. Temporarily, of course. Churchill gave
unconditional support to Stalin, welcoming him as an ally,
even embracing him as a friend, and calling the Breaker of
Nations, "Uncle Joe." In his single-minded obsession with
destroying German National Socialism (while establishing his
own British national socialism) and carrying on his
pre-World War I British Imperialist vendetta to destroy
Germany, Churchill completely failed to consider the danger
of inviting Soviet power and communism into the heart of
Europe.
Of course, his self-created
mythology--chiefly through his own books--states that he
sensed the danger and tried to warn Roosevelt about Stalin,
but the records of the time do not prove this out. In fact,
Churchill's infatuation with Stalin reached the point where
at the Tehran conference in November 1943, Churchill
presented Stalin with a Crusader's sword; Stalin, who had
murdered millions of Christians, was now presented by
Churchill as a defender of the Christian West.
But if one was to sum up Churchill's
passion, his overall reason for entering politics, it was
the empire. The British Empire was Churchill's abiding love.
He fought to expand it, he defended it, and he created his
decades-long hatred of Germany because of it. The Empire was
at the center of his view of the world. Even as late as
1947, Churchill opposed Indian independence. When Lord Irwin
urged him to bring his views on India up-to-date by talking
to some Indians Churchill replied "I am quite satisfied with
my views on India, and I don't want them disturbed by any
bloody Indians." So much for democracy.
Churchill the Socialist
Churchill made a name for himself as an opponent of
socialism both before and after the First World War, except
during the war when he was a staunch promoter of war
socialism, declaring in a speech: "Our whole nation must be
organized, must be socialized if you like the word." Of
course, such rank hypocrisy was by now Churchill's
stock-in-trade, and not surprisingly, during the 1945
election, Churchill described his partners in the national
unity government, the Labour Party, as totalitarians, when
it was Churchill himself who had accepted the infamous
Beveridge Report that laid the foundations for the post-war
welfare state and Keynesian (mis)management of the
economy.
As Mises wrote in 1950, "It is
noteworthy to remember that British socialism was not an
achievement of Mr. Attlee's Labor Government, but of the war
cabinet of Mr. Winston Churchill."
Churchill was converted to the
Bismarckian model of social insurance following a visit to
Germany. As Churchill told his constituents: "My heart was
filled with admiration of the patient genius which had added
these social bulwarks to the many glories of the German
race." He set out, in his words, to "thrust a big slice
of Bismarckianism over the whole underside of our industrial
system." In 1908, Churchill announced in a speech in Dundee:
"I am on the side of those who think that a greater
collective sentiment should be introduced into the State and
the municipalities. I should like to see the State
undertaking new functions." Churchill even said: "I go
farther; I should like to see the State embark on various
novel and adventurous experiments."
Churchill claimed that "the cause of
the Liberal Party is the cause of the left-out
millions," and attacked the Conservatives as "the Party
of the rich against the poor, the classes and their
dependents against the masses, of the lucky, the wealthy,
the happy, and the strong, against the left-out and the
shut-out millions of the weak and poor." Churchill berated
the Conservatives for lacking even a "single plan of social
reform or reconstruction," while boasting that his "New
Liberalism" offered "a wide, comprehensive, interdependent
scheme of social organisation," incorporating "a massive
series of legislative proposals and administrative
acts."
Churchill had fallen under the spell
of the Fabian Society, and its leaders Beatrice and Sidney
Webb, who more than any other group, are responsible for the
decline of British society. Here he was introduced to
William, later Lord Beveridge, who Churchill brought into
the Board of Trade as his advisor on social questions.
Besides pushing for a variety of social insurance schemes,
Churchill created the system of national labor exchanges,
stating the need to "spread . . . a sort of Germanized
network of state intervention and regulation" over the
British labor market. Churchill even entertained a more
ambitious goal for the Board of Trade. He proposed a plan
whereby the Board of Trade would act as the economic
"intelligence department" of the Government, forecasting
trade and employment in Britain so that the Government could
spend money in the most deserving areas. Controlling this
pork would be a Committee of National Organisation to plan
the economy.
Churchill was well aware of the
electoral potential of organized labor, so naturally
Churchill became a champion of the labor unions. He was a
leading supporter of the Trades Disputes Act of 1906 which
reversed the judicial decisions which had held unions
responsible for property damage and injuries committed by
their agents on the unions behalf, in effect granting unions
a privileged position exempting them from the ordinary law
of the land. It is ironic that the immense power of the
British labor unions that made Britain the "Sick Man of
Europe" for two generations and became the foil of Margaret
Thatcher, originated with the enthusiastic help of her hero,
Winston Churchill.
We can only conclude by Churchill's
actions that personal freedom was the furthest thing from
his mind.
Churchill and the First World
War
The Great War destroyed European culture and the
commitment to truths. In their place, generations embraced
relativism, nihilism and socialism, and from the ashes arose
Lenin, Stalin and Hitler and their evil doctrines that
infect contemporary culture. In the words of the British
historian, Niall Ferguson, the First World War "was nothing
less than the greatest error in modern history."
In 1911, Churchill became First Lord
of the Admiralty, and, during the crises that followed, used
every opportunity to fan the flames of war. When the final
crisis came, in 1914, Churchill was all smiles and was the
only cabinet member who backed war from the start. Asquith,
his own Prime Minister, wrote: "Winston very bellicose and
demanding immediate mobilization . . . has got all his war
paint on."
Churchill was instrumental in
establishing the illegal starvation blockade of Germany. The
blockade depended on scattering mines, and classified as
contraband food for civilians. But, throughout his career,
international law and the conventions created to limit the
horrors of war meant nothing to Churchill. One of the
consequences of the hunger blockade was that, while it
killed 750,000 German civilians by hunger and malnutrition,
the youth who survived went on to become the most fanatical
Nazis.
The Lusitania
Whether Churchill actually arranged for the sinking
of the Lusitania on May 7, 1915, is still unclear, but it is
clear that he did everything possible to ensure that
innocent Americans would be killed by German attempts to
break the hunger blockade.
A week before the disaster,
Churchill wrote to Walter Runciman, President of the Board
of Trade that it was "most important to attract neutral
shipping to our shores, in the hopes especially of
embroiling the United States with Germany."
The Lusitania was a civilian
passenger liner loaded with munitions. Earlier, Churchill
had ordered the captains of merchant ships, including
liners, to ram German submarines, and the Germans were aware
of this. The German government even took out newspaper ads
in New York warning Americans not to board the
ship.
Churchill, by helping engineer the
entry of the United States into the Great War, set in motion
the transformation of the war into a Democratic Jihad.
Wilsonianism lead to the eventual destruction of the
Austrian Empire, and the creation of a vast power vacuum on
Germany's southeastern border that would provide fruitful
opportunities and allies for Hitler's effort to overturn the
Versailles Treaty.
But Churchill was not a strategist.
All he cared for, as he told a visitor after his Gallipoli
disaster, was "the waging of war, the defeat of the
Germans."
Churchill Between the Wars
Churchill, who had been appointed Colonial
Secretary, invented two client kingdoms, Transjordan and
Iraq, both artificial and unstable states. Churchill's aim
of course was not liberty for oppressed peoples, as his
admirers like to claim for him, but for Britain to dominate
the Middle East to ensure that the oil wells of Iraq and the
Persian Gulf were securely in British hands.
The Crash of 1929
In 1924, Churchill rejoined the Conservative party
and was made Chancellor of the Exchequer, where he returned
Britain to the gold standard but didn't account for the
British governments wartime inflation, which consequently
severely damaged exports and ruined the good name of gold.
But, of course, Churchill cared nothing for economic ideas.
What interested him was only that the pound would be as
strong as in the days of Queen Victoria, that once more the
pound would "look the dollar in the face." The consequences
of this decision had a far-reaching and disastrous impact on
western civilization and the consequent appeal of socialism,
Nazism and communism: the Crash of 1929.
It was Churchill's unrealistic
exchange ratio that caused the Bank of England and the U.S.
Federal Reserve to collude to prop up the pound by inflating
the U.S. dollar, which in turn fueled the speculative boom
during the 1920's that collapsed when the inflating
slowed.
Churchill's fame - and his mythology
- originates during the period of the 30's, especially for
neoconservatives, for whom it is always 1938. However,
Churchill's hard line against Hitler was little different
from his usual warnings about pre-war Imperial Germany, and
his hard line against inter-war Weimar Germany. For
Churchill saw Germany at all times and in all ways as a
threat to the British Empire. A threat that had to be
destroyed and forever kept under heel. For instance,
Churchill denounced all calls for Allied disarmament even
before Hitler came to power. Churchill, like Clemenceau,
Wilson and other Allied leaders, held the unrealistic belief
that a defeated Germany would submit forever to the shackles
of Versailles.
And what the neocons forget, or
don't know, is that Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin
acknowledged in the House of Commons that, had they told the
people the truth, the Conservatives could never have won the
1936 election. "Supposing that I had gone to the country and
said that Germany was rearming and that we must be armed,
does anyone think that our pacific democracy would have
rallied to that cry?" It was Neville Chamberlain who began
the rearmament of Britain after the Munich Crisis, the arms
which Churchill would not have had during the Battle of
Britain, including the first deployment of radar, which
Churchill mocked while in opposition in the
1930s.
Moreover, Churchill's Cassandra-like
role during the '30s emerged largely because Churchill moved
from one impending threat to the next: Bolshevik Russia, the
General Strike of 1926, the dangers of Indian independence,
the abdication crisis in 1936. During the '30s Churchill was
the proverbial Boy Who Cried Wolf. Maybe his neocon admirers
could have learned that lesson about Iraq.
But as in all things, even with this
Churchill reversed himself. In the fall of 1937, he
stated:
"Three or four years ago I was
myself a loud alarmist. . . . In spite of the risks which
wait on prophecy, I declare my belief that a major war is
not imminent, and I still believe that there is a good
chance of no major war taking place in our lifetime. . . . I
will not pretend that, if I had to choose between Communism
and Nazism, I would choose Communism."
And in his book Step By Step written
in 1937, Churchill had this to say about the Mortal Enemy:
". . .one may dislike Hitler's system and yet admire his
patriotic achievement. If our country were defeated, I hope
we should find a champion as indomitable to restore our
courage and lead us back to our place among the nations."
One has to wonder if Churchill was referring to himself in
his hypothetical example.
The common mythology is so far from
historical truth that even an ardent Churchill sympathizer,
Gordon Craig, felt obliged to write:
It is reasonably well-known today
that Churchill was often ill-informed, that his claims about
German strength were exaggerated and his prescriptions
impractical, that his emphasis on air power was
misplaced.
Moreover, as a British historian
noted: "For the record, it is worth recalling that in the
1930s Churchill did not oppose the appeasement of either
Italy or Japan."
Churchill and the Second World
War
After Munich, Chamberlain was determined that Hitler
would have no more easy victories, and when Germany invaded
Poland in September 1939, Britain declared war on Germany,
and Churchill was recalled to his old place as First Lord of
the Admiralty. An astonishing thing then happened: the
President of the United States by-passed all the ordinary
diplomatic channels and initiated a personal correspondence,
not with the Prime Minister, but with Churchill. These
messages were surrounded by a frantic secrecy, and
culminated in the imprisonment of Tyler Kent, the American
cipher clerk at the U.S. embassy in London. Some of these
messages contained allusions to FDR's agreement prior to the
war to an alliance with Britain, contrary to his public
statements and American law.
Three months prior to the war,
Roosevelt told King George VI that he intended to set up a
zone in the Atlantic to be patrolled by the U.S. Navy, and,
according to the King's notes, the President stated that "if
he saw a U-boat he would sink her at once & wait for the
consequences." The biographer of George VI, John W.
Wheeler-Bennett, considered that these conversations
"contained the germ of the future Bases-for-Destroyers deal,
and also of the Lend-Lease Agreement itself."
In 1940, Churchill at last became
Prime Minister, ironically enough when the Chamberlain
government resigned over Churchill's aborted plan to
pre-emptively invade Norway. After France's armed forces
were destroyed by the Blitzkrieg, and the British army fled
towards the Channel, Churchill the conservative, the
"anti-socialist," defiled the common law by passing
totalitarian legislation placing "all persons, their
services and their property at the disposal of the Crown,"
i.e., into the hands of Churchill himself.
During the Battle of Britain,
Churchill gave perhaps his most famous speech, in which he
plagiarized the French Premier Georges Clemenceau, and where
he uttered his famous phrase "If the British Empire and its
Commonwealth lasts for a thousand years, men will say, "This
was their finest hour!" This calls to mind another man's
boast about a thousand year Reich. Churchill also hinted at
his plot to drag America into the war: ". . .we shall never
surrender, and even if . . . this island . . . were
subjugated . . . then our empire beyond the seas, armed and
guarded by the British Fleet, would carry on the struggle,
until, in God's good time, the New World, with all its power
and might, steps forth to the rescue and the liberation of
the Old." But like Marxist Revolutionaries, Christian
Millennialists and other assorted cranks, Churchill was not
at all interested in "God's good time" or any other presumed
unearthly schedule, and he worked night and day to collude
with Roosevelt to get America into the war.
As PM, Churchill continued his
policy to refuse any negotiated peace. Even after the Fall
of France, Churchill rejected Hitler's renewed peace
overtures. This, however, more than anything else, is
supposed to be the foundation of his greatness. Yet what
opportunities were lost to a free France and Britain and the
Low Countries before 1940 to re-arm and negotiate military
defense strategies? What of the time lost that could have
been used to study the Blitzkrieg method of warfare before
it crashed through France? The British historian John
Charmley made the crucial point that Churchill's adamant
refusal even to listen to peace proposals in 1940 doomed
what he claimed was most dear to him: the Empire and a
Britain that was nonsocialist and independent in world
affairs. One could add that by allowing Germany to overrun
its weaker neighbors when peace was possible it probably
also doomed European Jewry as well. How many more millions
of Jews and other Europeans were murdered because of
Churchill's stupidity? But it is politically incorrect, and
even possibly a hate crime to suggest that better
alternatives were available during World War II than those
made by the Allies. Just because something turned out one
way does not mean that was the only way it could have turned
out or was the best result. Somehow, it is controversial to
say this.
The peace camp realized something
that escaped Churchill the empire romanticist: even the
British Empire and her vast resources alone could not defeat
the concentrated power that Germany possessed in Europe. And
even more after the Fall of France, Churchill's war aim of
total victory could be realized only by embroiling the
United States in another world war.
As an aside to the French-haters,
what they forget is that, if the U.S. army had met the
Wehrmacht in 1940, it would have fared considerably worse
than the French Army. National chauvinists, however, prefer
their petty hatreds.
Involving America was Churchill's
policy in World War II, just as it was Churchill's policy in
World War I, and would be his policy again in the Cold War.
Churchill put his heart and soul into ensuring Roosevelt
came through.
In 1940, Churchill sent British
agent "Intrepid" to the United States, where he set up shop
in Rockefeller Center, where, with the full knowledge and
cooperation of Roosevelt and the collaboration of federal
agencies, "Intrepid" and his 300 agents "intercepted mail,
tapped wires, cracked safes, kidnapped, . . . rumor
mongered" and incessantly smeared their favorite targets,
the "isolationists" (i.e., Jeffersonians) as nazis and
fascists.
In June 1941, Churchill, looking for
a chance to bring America into the war, wrote regarding the
German warship, Prinz Eugen: "It would be better for
instance that she should be located by a U.S. ship as this
might tempt her to fire on that ship, thus providing the
incident for which the U.S. government would be so
grateful."
Churchill also instructed the
British ambassador to Tokyo, Sir Robert Craigie, "the entry
of the United States into war either with Germany and Italy
or with Japan, is fully conformable with British interests.
Nothing in the munitions sphere can compare with the
importance of the British Empire and the United States being
co-belligerent."
In August 1941, Roosevelt and
Churchill met at the Atlantic conference. Churchill told his
Cabinet "The President had said he would wage war but not
declare it and that he would become more and more
provocative. If the Germans did not like it, they could
attack American forces. . . . Everything was to be done to
force an incident."
After the U.S. had officially
entered the war, on February 15, 1942, in the House of
Commons, Churchill declared, of America's entry into the
war: "This is what I have dreamed of, aimed at, worked for,
and now it has come to pass."
This deceptive alliance illustrates
another of Churchill's faults. His subordination of
political aims to military planning. Churchill made war for
the sake of making war, with little regard for the political
results that follow. He once even told Asquith that his
life's ambition was "to command great victorious armies in
battle." And World War II was his opportunity. Churchill and
Roosevelt were both willing to do anything to destroy the
menace of Nazi Germany, at a time when Hitler had killed
perhaps several hundred thousand, and to do so they would
ally with Hitler's former ally in the invasion of Poland,
Joseph Stalin (the Soviet Union had even been invited to
join the Axis in 1940), who had already murdered tens of
millions. But why is it conventional wisdom that compromise
with one dictator at a vital period would have been immoral
while collaboration with an even greater dictator with
genuine global ambitions was the mark of
greatness?
The truth is Churchill cared for
nothing but Britain. The lives, homes and cultures of
non-Britons he took and destroyed without a care or second
thought. What sort of 'conservatism' requires the murder of
millions of defenseless innocents? Winston Churchill was a
man who along with Roosevelt, Hitler and Stalin, probed just
how far Western Civilization could fall in just six
short years of time.
Churchill threw British support to
the Communist Partisan leader Tito. What a victory for Tito
would mean was no secret to Churchill. When an aide pointed
out that Tito intended to transform Yugoslavia into a
Communist dictatorship on the Stalinist model, Churchill
retorted: "Do you intend to live there?" What a
humanitarian.
Of course, in Stalin, Churchill and
Roosevelt were confronted with a man who had an overall
political aim for the war. Stalin knew what he wanted to
achieve from the destruction of Germany. For Churchill, his
only aim was to beat Hitler, and then he would start
thinking of the future of Britain and Europe. Churchill said
it in so many words: "It was to be the defeat, ruin, and
slaughter of Hitler, to the exclusion of all other purposes,
loyalties and aims."
Churchill's aim was in his words,
the "indefinite prevention of their [the Germans']
rising again as an Armed Power." Not surprisingly, instead
of making every effort to encourage and assist the anti-Nazi
resistance groups in Germany, Churchill responded to the
feelers sent out by the German resistance with silence, thus
helping to prolong the war and the killing. Even more
shockingly, Churchill had nothing but scorn for the heroic
officers after their failed assassination attempt on Hitler
in July 1944, even as Hitler was enjoying their filmed
executions.
In the place of help, Churchill only
offered Germans the slogan of unconditional surrender, which
only prolonged the war further. And instead of promoting the
overthrow of Hitler by anti-Nazi Germans, Churchill's policy
was all-out support of Stalin. Returning from Yalta,
Churchill told the House of Commons on February 27, 1945
that he did not know any government that kept its
obligations as faithfully as did the Soviet Union, even to
its disadvantage.
The War Crimes
That Churchill committed war crimes - planned them,
aided and abetted them, and defended them - is beyond doubt.
Churchill was the prime subverter through two world wars of
the rules of warfare that had evolved in the West over
centuries.
At the Quebec conference, Roosevelt
and Churchill adopted the Morgenthau Plan, which if
implemented would have killed tens of millions of Germans,
giving the Germans a terrifying picture of what
"unconditional surrender" would mean in practice. Churchill
was convinced of the plans benefits, as it "would save
Britain from bankruptcy by eliminating a dangerous
competitor." That the Morgenthau Plan was analogous to
Hitler's post-conquest plans for western Russia and the
Ukraine was lost on Churchill, who according to Morgenthau,
drafted the wording of the scheme.
Churchill even brainstormed dropping
tens of thousands of anthrax "super bombs" on the civilian
population of Germany, and ordered detailed planning for a
chemical attack on six major cities, estimating that
millions would die immediately "by inhalation," with
millions more succumbing later.
But Churchill's greatest war crimes
involved the terror bombing of German cities that killed
600,000 civilians and left some 800,000 injured. Arthur
Harris ("Bomber Harris"), the head of Bomber Command, stated
"In Bomber Command we have always worked on the assumption
that bombing anything in Germany is better than bombing
nothing."
Churchill brazenly lied to the House
of Commons and the public, claiming that only military and
industrial installations were targeted. In fact, the aim was
to kill as many civilians as possible. Hence the application
of "carpet" bombing in an attempt to terrorize the Germans
into surrendering.
Professor Raico described the effect
of Churchillian statesmanship: "The campaign of murder from
the air leveled Germany. A thousand-year-old urban culture
was annihilated, as great cities, famed in the annals of
science and art, were reduced to heaps of smoldering ruins.
. . ." No wonder that, learning of this, a civilized
European man like Joseph Schumpeter, at Harvard, was driven
to telling "anyone who would listen" "that Churchill and
Roosevelt were destroying more than Genghis
Khan."
According to the official history of
the Royal Air Force: "The destruction of Germany was by then
on a scale which might have appalled Attila or Genghis
Khan." Dresden was filled with masses of helpless
refugees running for their lives ahead of the advancing Red
Army. The war was practically over, but for three days and
nights, from February 13 to 15, 1945, British bombs pounded
Dresden, killing as many as 135,000 people or more in three
days. After the massacre, Churchill attempted to disclaim
responsibility; even casually saying "I thought the
Americans did it."
The terror bombing of Germany and
the killing of civilians continued as late as the middle of
April, 1945. It only stopped, as Bomber Harris noted,
because there were essentially no more targets left to be
bombed in Germany.
In order to kill a maximum number of
Germans, Winston Churchill dismissed politics or policy as a
'secondary consideration,' and on at least two occasions
said that there were "no lengths of violence to which we
would not go" in order to achieve his objective. In fact he
said this publicly in a speech given on September 31, 1943,
and again in the House of Commons, on February 27, 1945,
when unbelievable lengths of violence had already taken
place. If Hitler had uttered this phrase, we would all cite
it as more evidence of his barbarism. Yet, when Churchill
utters it, his apologists palm it off as the resoluteness
required of a great statesman, rather than describing it as
an urge for mass, indiscriminate murder.
Of course, Churchill supported the
atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which resulted in
the deaths of another 200,000 civilians. When Truman
fabricated the myth of the "500,000 American lives saved" to
justify his mass murder, Churchill felt the need to top his
lie: the atomic bombings had saved 1,200,000 lives,
including 1,000,000 Americans. It was all just another of
Churchill's fantasies.
Yet, after all this slaughter,
Churchill would write: "The goal of World War II
[was] to revive the status of man."
Churchill and the Cold War
Among Churchill's many war crimes, there are also
those crimes and atrocities for which he is culpable that
occurred following the war.
These include the forced
repatriation of some two million old people, men, women, and
children to the Soviet Union to their deaths. Then there
were the massacres carried out by Churchill's
protégé, Tito: tens of thousands of Croats,
Slovenes and other "class-enemies" and anti-Communists
were killed.
In the wake of the armies of
Churchill's friend and ally, the mass deportations began.
But Churchill was unmoved. In January 1945 he said: "Why are
we making a fuss about the Russian deportations in Rumania
of Saxons [Germans] and others? . . . I cannot see
the Russians are wrong in making 100 or 150 thousand of
these people work their passage. . . . I cannot myself
consider that it is wrong of the Russians to take Rumanians
of any origin they like to work in the Russian coal-fields."
Here Churchill, the great friend of liberty as Bush
described him, approves of slavery. About 500,000 German
civilians were enslaved to work in Soviet Russia, in
accordance with the Yalta agreement where Churchill and
Roosevelt agreed that slave labor constituted a proper form
of "reparations."
Then there was the great atrocity of
the expulsion of 15 million Germans from their ancestral
homelands in East and West Prussia, Silesia, Pomerania, and
the Sudetenland, pursuant to Churchill's mad plan to
violently uproot the entire polish population and move
Poland westward, which he demonstrated with a set of
matchsticks, and to Churchill's acceptance of the Czech
leader Eduard Benes's plan for the ethnic cleansing of
Bohemia and Moravia. Around two million German civilians
died in this process. An entire ancient culture was
obliterated. This sort of cultural jihad used to be
something conservatives opposed. Today's neoconservatives
instead, who evidently embrace the Marxist doctrine of
sweeping away the past, would surely argue that in order to
create, one must first destroy, or in that old Stalinist
phrase, to make an omelet, you must first break a few
eggs.
A large factor in the litany of
Churchill's war crimes was his racism. Churchill was an
English chauvinist, a British racist, and like Wilson,
loathed the so-called "dirty whites," the French, Italians
and other Latin's, and Slavs like the Serbs, Poles,
Russians, etc.... Churchill professed Darwinism, and
particularly disliked the Catholic Church and Christian
missions. He became, in his own words, "a materialist to the
tips of my fingers," and fervently upheld the worldview that
human life is a struggle for existence, with the outcome the
survival of the fittest.
In 1919, as Colonial Secretary
Churchill advocated the use of chemical weapons on the
"uncooperative Arabs" in the puppet state of Iraq. "I do not
understand the squeamishness about the use of gas," he
declared. "I am strongly in favor of using poison gas
against uncivilized tribes." Some year's later, gassing
human beings to death would make other men
infamous.
An example of Churchill's racial
views are his comments made in 1937: "I do not admit that a
great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or
the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong
has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger
race, a higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race, has
come in and taken their place."
In Churchill's single-minded
decades-long obsession with preventing a single hegemonic
power from arising on the European continent that would pose
a threat to the British Empire, he failed to see that his
alliance with Stalin produced exactly that. "As the blinkers
of war were removed," John Charmley writes, "Churchill
began to perceive the magnitude of the mistake which had
been made." Churchill is alleged to have blurted out after
finally realizing the scale of his blunder: "We have
slaughtered the wrong pig!"
But it was too late. For decades
Churchill worked for the destruction of Germany. Yet only
after Stalin had devoured half of Europe did this "great
statesman" realize that destroying the ability of Germany to
act as a counterbalance to Russia left Europe ripe for
invasion and conquest by a resurgent Russia.
By 1946 Churchill was complaining in
a voice of outrage about the Iron Curtain of tyranny that
descended on Eastern Europe. But Churchill helped to weave
the fabric.
With the balance of power in Europe
wrecked by his own hand, Churchill saw only one recourse: to
bind America to Europe permanently. Thus Churchill returned
to his tried-and-true strategy, embroiling the United States
in another war. This time a "Cold War" that would entrench
the military-industrial complex and change America
forever.
Conclusion
With his lack of principles and scruples, Churchill
was involved in one way or another in nearly every disaster
that befell the 20th century. He helped destroy
laissez-faire liberalism, he played a role in the Crash of
1929, he helped start WWI, and by bringing in America to
help, prolonged the war and created the conditions for the
rise of Nazism, prolonged WWII, laid the groundwork for
Soviet domination, helped involve America in a cold war with
Russia, and pioneered in the development of total war and
undermining western civilized standards.
Chris Matthews described Churchill
as the "man who save[d] the honor of the 20th
century." Rather than this great accolade, Winston Churchill
must be ranked with Karl Marx, Woodrow Wilson, Vladimir
Lenin, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Herbert Hoover and
Franklin Roosevelt as one of the destroyers of the values
and greatness of Western civilization.
And it is fitting that the Library
of Congress exhibition is entitled "Churchill and the Great
Republic" because few men have done more to overthrow the
American Republic(s) and institute the great centralized
global war machine that has taken its place.
Adam Young is co-founder of The
Resume Store, a Canadian-based service offering resumes and
cover letters. Send him MAIL, and see
his Mises.org Articles Archive.
Bibliography:
Raico, Ralph. "Rethinking Churchill." In The
Costs of War: America's Pyrrhic Victories.
Massie, Robert K. Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and the
Coming of the Great War.
"Roosevelt and the First Shot: A Study of Deceit and
Deception." John V. Denson, and "Despotism Loves Company:
The Story of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Josef Stalin." Yuri
N. Maltsev and Barry Dean Simpson. Both in Reassessing The
Presidency: The Rise of the Executive State and the Decline
of Freedom. 2001. ed. by John V. Denson
Mises, Ludwig von. [1944]. Omnipotent
Government.
Morris, Jan. Farewell The Trumpets.
Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A
History of Nazi Germany.
Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Erik von. Leftism Revisited: From de Sade
and Marx to Hitler and Pol Pot.
Rothbard, Murray N. [1963]. America's Great
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