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Churchill After the War

이강기 2019. 10. 30. 16:20

Churchill After the War

Review of 'The Churchill Documents Volume 22' edited by Martin Gilbert and Larry Arnn

Churchill

“I found it very odd being turned out of power just at the moment when I imagined I would be able to reap where I had sown,” Winston Churchill wrote about his 1945 general-election defeat to his old friend Hugh Tudor in January 1946, “and perhaps bring about some lasting settlement in this troubled world.” He then considered the Second World War, writing, “What a wonderful thing it is, looking back, to see all we have survived. All the follies that England commits in time of peace did not prevent her true greatness from shining forth in the hour of need. And now, although other perils can be discerned, we may at least say that the German danger is behind us.”


This is one among several hundred letters that appear in the 2,232 pages of Hillsdale College’s 22nd volume of The Churchill Documents, Martin Gilbert and Larry Arnn’s stupendous compendium of every major document that crossed Churchill’s desk. This volume contains all such material between the 1945 election and his return to the premiership in October 1951. It is a curiously under-examined part of Churchill’s career, yet it encompassed the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan and her subsequent surrender, his Iron Curtain speech in Missouri, the partition of India and the creation of the State of Israel, the Berlin airlift, and the founding of NATO and the European movement, upon all of which Churchill took important stances.