A COLD WAR

#68 - Two And A Half Men


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  • Well the election result shocked everyone.
  • And the rest of the contingent at Potsdam weren’t very happy about it either.
  • We might think that the Soviets would be please to be dealing with a British government made up of socialists.
  • But that wasn’t the case.
  • Stalin didn’t like Attlee or the British Labour Party.
  • Despite Churchill’s attempts during the election to paint Labour as pro-Soviet, neither Attlee nor Stalin saw themselves as fellow travellers.
  • To the Labour Party, Soviet-style economic models were horrible.
  • To the Soviets, the Labour Party seemed no less capitalist or imperialist than the Tories.
  • Far better, in Stalin’s mind, to deal with the Churchill devil he knew rather than the Attlee devil he most certainly did not.
  • Attlee wrote: “I knew from experience,” he wrote, “that the communists had always fought us more vigorously than the Tories because they thought we offered a viable alternative to communism. They regarded the Tories as advocates of a dying cause while they thought we were a rival”
  • The British of course were horrified.
  • Cadogan called Churchill’s defeat “a display of base ingratitude” on the part of the British people and “rather humiliating for our country.”
  • Field Marshal Alan Brooke saw the timing of the election itself as another in a long line of Churchill’s mistakes in domestic politics, and one with potentially catastrophic repercussions.
  • “What a ghastly mistake to start elections at this point of the world’s history!” he wrote in his diary that night, “May God forgive England for it.”
  • Brooke blamed Churchill personally, saying, “If only Winston had followed any advice, he would have been in at any rate till the end of the year!”
  • Instead, Brooke noted, Churchill had counted on his personality to carry the election, just as he had counted on his personality to win over Truman and Stalin.
  • Tragically, he had failed at both.
  • Some tried to tell Churchill that the British people had not rejected him personally, but the Conservative Party in general.
  • The data, however, tell a different story.
  • The Tories actually performed worse in districts where Churchill himself had campaigned.
  • Clearly, he had lost the faith of the British people even if he could not quite figure out why.
  • “It may well be a blessing in disguise,” Clementine told him.
  • “At the moment,” he replied, “it seems quite effectively disguised.”
  • Attlee himself thought the result had more to do with the economic policies of the Tories in the 30s and the appeasement of Hitler - nothing Churchill could personally be blamed for.
  • Churchill returned to No. 10 Downing Street for one last meeting as prime minister.
  • He told Eden that he expected his own political career to be at an end, but that Eden would himself one day return to Downing Street as prime minister.
  • Churchill appeared to Eden as “pretty wretched, poor old boy.”
  • Losing the election, Churchill told Eden, was “like a wound which becomes more painful after the first shock.”
  • The British government had even taken away his bodyguards,
  • The American delegate Walter Brown observed that “the Empire he had saved did not think enough of him to keep a guard for a single night after he had been defeated.”
  • Churchill drove down to Chequers for a final weekend at the country home of the prime minister, writing his name and “FINIS” in the guest book as his tenure as Britain’s wartime leader came to an end.
  • The end was pretty harsh: no one even asked Churchill to deliver an address to the nation when the Japanese surrendered in August.
  • Churchill told Lord Moran that “it would have been better to have been killed in an aeroplane or to have died like Roosevelt.”
  • When the king announced he was awarding the Order of the Garter to Eden, Eden replied
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    A COLD WARBy Cameron Reilly & Ray Harris