Finest Years

Home > Other > Finest Years > Page 68
Finest Years Page 68

by Max Hastings


  Yet by July 1945 the British people hungered for simpler and more immediate things. They had played their parts in the most terrible global drama in history. Now they were eager to quit the stage, to address themselves to their own private and social purposes, which Churchill only dimly understood, and was unsuited to assist them to fulfil. Alexandre Dumas wrote: ‘Il existe des services si grands par qu’ils peuvent se payer que l’ingratitude.’ The electorate had performed a service to Churchill, as well as to itself, by parting company with its great war leader when there was no more war for him to lead. He was profoundly glad for his nation that its struggle was approaching a conclusion, but deeply grieved for himself. At noon on 27 July he held his final cabinet—‘a pretty grim affair’, in Eden’s words:

  After it was over I was on my way to the front door when W. called me back and we had half an hour alone. He was pretty wretched, poor old boy. Said he didn’t feel any more reconciled this morning, on the contrary it hurt more, like a wound which becomes more painful after the first shock. He couldn’t help feeling his treatment had been scurvy. ‘Thirty years of my life have been passed in this room. I shall never sit in it again. You will, but I shall not,’ with more to the same effect.

  As he left Chequers after a final weekend with his family and intimates, he wrote in its visitors’ book: ‘FINIS’. Three weeks later, on 15 August, Japan’s surrender brought an end to the Second World War.

  Churchill had wielded more power than any other British prime minister had known, or would know again. In 1938 he seemed a man out of his time, a patrician imperialist whose vision was rooted in Britain’s Victorian past. By 1945, while this remained true, and goes far to explain his own disappointments, it had not prevented him from becoming the greatest war leader his country had ever known, a statesman whose name rang across the world like that of no other Englishman in history. Himself believing Britain great, for one last brief season he was able to make her so. To an extraordinary degree, what he achieved between 1940 and 1945 defined the nation’s self-image even into the twenty-first century.

  His achievement was to exercise the privileges of a dictator without casting off the mantle of a democrat. Ismay once found him bemoaning the bother of preparing a speech for the House of Commons, and obviously apprehensive about its reception. The soldier said emolliently: ‘Why don’t you tell them to go to hell?’ Churchill turned in a flash: ‘You should not say those things: I am the servant of the House.’ General Sikorski remarked at Chequers that the prime minister was a dictator chosen by the people. Churchill corrected him: ‘No, I am a privileged domestic, a valet de chambre, the servant of the House of Commons.’ It should be a source of wonder and pride, that such a man led Britain through the war, more than half-believing this. It was entirely appropriate that he led a coalition government, for he was never a party man. He existed, sui generis, outside the framework of conventional politics, and never seemed any more comfortable with the Conservative Party than was it with him. A.G. Gardiner wrote of Churchill back in 1914: ‘He would no more think of consulting a party than the chauffeur would of consulting the motor car.’ The same was true in 1945.

  As for Churchill’s war direction, it is not difficult to identify his strategic errors and misplaced enthusiasms. Anatole France wrote, ‘Après la bataille, c’est l`a que triomphent les tacticiens.’ Yet the outcome justified all. The defining fact of Churchill’s leadership was Britain’s emergence from the Second World War among the victors. This, most of his own people acknowledged. No warlord, no commander, in history has failed to make mistakes: as Tedder observed, ‘War is organised confusion.’ It is as easy to catalogue the mistakes of Alexander the Great, Caesar, Napoleon as those of Churchill. Both Britain’s most distinguished earlier war leaders, Pitt the Elder and Younger, were responsible for graver strategic follies than himself.

  Historians and biographers have a duty to present evidence for the prosecution, to identify blunders and shortcomings. But before the jury retires, it is necessary to strip away nugatory matter, and focus upon essentials. Churchill towers over the war, standing higher than any other single human being at the head of the forces of light, as many Americans recognised. Mark Sullivan wrote in the New York Herald Tribune on 11 May 1945: ‘Churchill’s greatness is unexcelled…Churchill’s part in this world war reduces the classic figures of Rome and Greece to the relatively inconsequent stature of actors in dramas of minor scope…Churchill was the fighting leader, and his own poet.’ Anyone who attempts the difficult feat of imagining British wartime history deprived of his presence will find it sadly shrunken in stature. Even Brooke was once moved to complain: ‘dull cabinet without PM’. To an extraordinary degree, one man raised his nation far above the place in the Grand Alliance which its contribution in troops, tanks, ships, planes could have justified from 1943 onwards. It must be mistaken to assess Churchill’s war leadership in isolation. When it is measured against that of Roosevelt or Stalin, not to mention Hitler, Mussolini or Tojo, his failures and shortcomings shrink dramatically. No honourable course of action existed which could have averted his nation’s bankruptcy and exhaustion in 1945, nor its eclipse from world power amid the new primacy of the United States and Russia.

  Churchill possessed the ability, through his oratory, to invest with majesty the deeds and even failures of mortal men. More than any other national leader in history, and aided by the power of broadcast communications, he caused words to become not mere assertions of fact or expressions of intent, but acts of governance. ‘His countrymen have come to feel that he is saying what they would like to say for themselves if they knew how,’ wrote Moran. ‘…Perhaps for the first time in his life, he seems to see things through the eyes of the average man. He still says what he is feeling at the moment, but now it turns out that he is speaking for the nation.’

  In reality, as this book has sought to show, Churchill did not command the respect and trust of all the British people all of the time. But he empowered millions to look beyond the havoc of the battlefield, the squalor of their domestic circumstances amid privation and bombardment, and to perceive a higher purpose in their struggles and sacrifices. This was, of course, of greater importance in averting defeat in 1940-41 than later, when the Allies were able to commit superior masses of men and material to securing victory. Churchill’s rhetoric has played a significant part in causing the struggle against Hitler to be perceived by posterity as ‘the good war’. He explained the struggle as no one else could, in terms mankind could comprehend and relate to, now as then. Even most American historians, when chronicling the wartime era, are more generous in their use of quotations from the words of Winston Churchill than from those of their own president, Franklin Roosevelt.

  He cherished aspirations which often proved greater than his nation was capable of fulfilling. This, too, has been among the principal themes of this narrative. But it seems inconsistent to applaud his defiance of reason in insisting that Britain must fight on in June 1940, and then to denounce the extravagance of his later demands upon the nation and its armed forces. The service chiefs often deplored his misjudgements and intemperance. Yet his instinct for war was far more highly developed than their own. If they were often right in pleading that the time was not ripe to fight, left to their own devices they would have been intolerably slow to fight at all. While Brooke was an officer of remarkable qualities, like many soldiers he was a limited human being. He deluded himself in claiming, as he did after the conflict, that Western strategy had evolved in accordance with his own conception. While this may have been so in 1942-43, thereafter the European war was brought to a conclusion in consequence of Soviet exertions aided by American supplies, with significant assistance from the strategic air offensive and Eisenhower’s armies. In the west, major military operations—which means the north-west Europe campaign—conformed to an American design, to which the foremost British contribution was to delay the invasion of the Continent until conditions were overwhelmingly favourable.
<
br />   Britain produced few outstanding military commanders in the Second World War, a reflection of the institutional debility of the British Army which also afflicted its tactics, choice of weapons, and battlefield performance. The Royal Navy was Britain’s finest fighting service of the war, its performance tarnished only by the limitations of the Fleet Air Arm. The Royal Air Force also made an outstanding contribution, but like the USAAF it suffered from the obsessive reluctance of its higher commanders to subordinate their independent strategic ambitions to the interests of naval and ground operations.

  It is often and justly remarked that Churchill enjoyed war. He revered heroes. Yet away from the battlefield, he seldom found such men congenial companions. Few generals are highly cultured men or notable conversationalists, capable of illuminating a conference room or dinner table to Churchill’s standard. In his peacetime life, even after the two world wars, old warhorses played little part. Many people supposed that he himself would have coveted a Victoria Cross. This was surely true in his youth. But when his daughter Mary asked in his old age whether he felt that anything was missing from his wondrous array of laurels, he said nothing of medals, but instead answered slowly: ‘I should have liked my father to have lived long enough to see that I made something of my life.’

  During the war years, his commanders far more often disappointed his hopes than fulfilled them. He was forever searching for great captains, Marlboroughs and Wellingtons, yet towards the end he grew impatient even with Alexander, his unworthy favourite. He valued both Brooke and Montgomery, but never warmed to them, save as instruments of his will. Neither the British Army nor its chieftains fulfilled his soaring warrior ideal, and it was never plausible that they should. Much of the story of Churchill and the Second World War is of Britain’s leader seeking from his nation’s torpid military culture greater things than it was capable of achieving. He inspired it to accomplish more than it dreamed possible in June 1940, but never as much as he wanted. Such is the nature of the relationship between many great leaders and their peoples, who know themselves mortal clay. Had Britain—or America—produced legions of warriors such as those of wartime Germany and Japan, they would have ceased to be the kind of liberal democracies the war was fought to preserve.

  If Churchill’s rhetoric and personality had been less remarkable, if he himself had not been so lovable, some of his military decisions might have been more harshly judged both by his contemporaries and by posterity. As it was, he was able to weave spells in the House of Commons and in his writings, which deflected even the best-merited criticisms. The only charge against him which stuck with the public, and lost him the general election of 1945, derived from his indifference to forging a new society. Moran wrote in 1943: ‘With Winston war is an end in itself rather than a means to an end.’ The British people understood his indifference to humdrum domestic issues, and thus acted as sensibly in evicting Churchill from Downing Street in 1945 as they had done by supporting his installation there in 1940.

  Macmillan was at least half right in asserting that only Churchill could have secured the commitment of American power to the Mediterranean and Europe in the year following Pearl Harbor. Without his personal influence, the lure of the Pacific might have proved irresistible to Roosevelt and his chiefs of staff. If the Americans in 1944-45 came to regret their engagement in the Mediterranean, in 1942-43 it is impossible to perceive how else the Western Allied armies could have played their part in fighting Hitler’s armies.

  There is an inescapable pathos about Churchill’s predicament in the last year of the war, because almost all his ambitions were frustrated, save for victory over the Axis. His engagement with armies became almost exclusively that of a tourist, because he could no longer much influence their movements. For such a mighty warrior, this was a source of unhappiness. The limits to his powers of negotiation with Roosevelt and Stalin were set by economic and strategic realities. But he accomplished the little that a British leader could.

  Churchill’s view of the British Empire and its peoples was unenlightened by comparison with that of America’s president, or even by the standards of his time. This must be set in the balance against his huge virtues. He excluded brown and black peoples from his personal vision of freedom. Yet almost all of us are discriminatory, not necessarily racially, in the manner and degree in which we focus our finite stores of compassion. In this as in many other things, Churchill displayed mortal fallibility. Most great national leaders are cold men, as Roosevelt ultimately was, for all his capacity to simulate warmth. Churchill, despite monumental egoism, displayed a human sympathy that was none the less impressive because he often neglected intimates and servants, and failed to extend his charity to imperial subject races.

  Any assessment of Churchill’s wartime contribution must include words of homage to his wife. Clementine provided a service to the world by her manifold services to her husband, foremost among which was to tell him truths about himself. He was a domestic and parental failure, as most great men are. It would be disruptive to any family to accommodate a lion in the drawing room. Without ever taming Winston, Clementine managed and tempered him as far as any mortal could, while sustaining her husband’s love in a fashion which moves posterity. Whatever he might have been without his indomitable wife, it would surely have been something less than he was.

  History must take Churchill as a whole, as his wartime countrymen were obliged to do, rather than employ a spokeshave to strip away the blemishes created by his lunges into excess and folly. If the governance of nations in peace is best conducted by reasonable men, in war there is a powerful argument for leadership by those sometimes willing to adopt courses beyond the boundaries of reason, as Churchill did in 1940-41. His foremost quality was strength of will. This was so fundamental to his triumph in the early war years that it seems absurd to suggest that he should have become more biddable, merely because in 1943-45 his stubbornness was sometimes deployed in support of misjudged purposes.

  He was probably the greatest actor upon the stage of affairs whom the world has ever known. Familiarity with his speeches, conversation and the fabulous anecdotage about his wartime doings does nothing to diminish our capacity to be moved to awe, tears, laughter by the sustained magnificence of his performance. He was the largest human being ever to occupy his office. If his leadership through the Second World War was imperfect, it is certain that no other British ruler in history has matched his direction of the nation in peril, nor, please God, is ever likely to find himself in circumstances to surpass it.

  * * *

  * Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force.

  NOTES AND SOURCES

  Abbreviations

  BNA British National Archive

  CAC Churchill Archive Centre

  IWM Imperial War Museum

  LHA Liddell Hart Archive at King’s College London

  USNA US National Archive

  After much vacillation, I have omitted references to some documents which have been for many years in the public domain, and which are clearly identified and dated in the text. All direct quotations from Churchill not otherwise sourced are to be found in Martin Gilbert’s volumes.

  Introduction

  xv ‘He had once conceived’ James Boswell The Life of Samuel Johnson Everyman 2004 p.1100

  xvi ‘Andrew Roberts has painted’ Andrew Roberts Masters and Commanders Penguin 2008

  xvi ‘The most vivid wartime memory’ author interview 1992

  xvi ‘he told his staff’ John Colville The Fringes of Power: Downing Street Diaries 1939-1955 Hodder & Stoughton 1985 10.12.40

  xviii ‘Everything depended upon him’ Action this Day ed. Sir John Wheeler-Bennett Macmillan 1968 p.236

  xviii ‘He was not mad’ Nigel Knight Churchill Unmasked David & Charles 2008 p.366

  xviii ‘may overstate his indispensability’ Chris Wrigley Churchill Haus 2006 p.85

  xx ‘It would be easy by a cunning’ LHA MS diary of Maj. Gen. Sir John Kennedy 26.1.
41

  xxii ‘Churchill so evidently’ The Diaries of James Lees-Milne John Murray 2007 p.69 19.8.72

  xxiii ‘I wish I were twenty’ The Diaries of Harold Nicolson 1939-45 ed. Nigel Nicolson Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1967 9.9.39

  Chapter 1: The Battle of France

  2 ‘It was a marvel’ David Reynolds In Command of History Penguin 2004 p.126

  3 ‘If there is going to be a war’ SB to Lord Davidson—Kenneth Young Stanley Baldwin Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1976 p.112

  3 ‘several fishing rods’ IWM Sir C. Nicholson Papers p.9

  3 ‘I don’t think WSC will be’ quoted Roberts op. cit. p.199, undisclosed source 13.5.40

  3 ‘It’s all a great pity’ Butler Papers G11 quoted Roberts op. cit. p.209

  3 ‘If I had to spend’ Nella Last’s War ed. Richard Broad and Suzie Fleming Sphere 1983 p.51

  4 ‘Events are moving so fast’ New Yorker 12.5.40

  4 ‘Elizabethan zest for life’ Harold Nicolson Spectator 17.5.40

  4 ‘How Winston thinks’ The Empire at Bay: The Leo Amery Diaries 1929-1945 ed. John Barnes and David Nicholson Hutchinson 1988 p.615 11.5.40

  4 ‘conscious of a profound’ WSC Second World War vol. i Cassell 1948 p.526

  5 ‘David, sir, David!’ Hugh Sebag-Montefiore Dunkirk Penguin 2006 p.59

  7 ‘British troops have landed’ Sir Michael Howard personal recollection to the author 28.12.08

  8 ‘Perhaps the darkest day’ Chips: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon ed. Robert Rhodes-James Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1965 p.248

  9 ‘In May 1940, while few’ Robert Rhodes-James Churchill: A Study in Failure 1900-39 London 1970

 

‹ Prev