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Churchill's Secret War

Page 40

by Madhusree Mukerjee


  43 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 995.

  44 Colville, The Fringes of Power, Vol. II, 139; Loewenheim, Langley, and Jonas, Roosevelt and Churchill, 74.

  45 Quoted in Ponting, Churchill, 635; Sinha and Khera, Indian War Economy, 54.

  46 Cherwell Papers, H126/1, 2, and H124/22.

  47 Moon, Wavell, 93; Roy, “Military Loyalty,” 511; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 128.

  48 MT 59/657, “Import of Food Grains into India,” January 1945.

  Chapter Eleven

  1 Dhara, Probaho, 172–175. Bose did send small parties of INA operatives by submarine, but almost all were captured.

  2 Ibid., 176.

  3 Ibid., 176–179.

  4 Ibid., 182–184.

  5 Quoted in Read and Fisher, The Proudest Day, 350; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. II, 106.

  6 Moon, Wavell, 91.

  7 Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 81–82, 258, 371, 375.

  8 Moon, Wavell, 111.

  9 Ibid., 108.

  10 Ibid., 260–261, 368, 236; Schofield, Wavell: Soldier & Statesman,115.

  11 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1023; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 130–131.

  12 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1018.

  13 Churchill and Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, Vol. VII, 1166.

  14 Nichols, Verdict on India, 15–17, 23, 36–39, 184, 188–189.

  15 Ibid., 216–224.

  16 Churchill and Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, Vol. VII, 1166.

  17 Berthon and Potts, Warlords, 268.

  18 Sbrega, “The Anticolonial Policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt,” 76; Louis, Imperialism at Bay, 458–460.

  19 Louis, Imperialism at Bay, 486.

  20 Colville, The Fringes of Power, Vol. II, 203.

  21 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1015; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 126, 1070.

  22 Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 765; Moon, Wavell, 120; Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1031(footnote).

  23 Moon, Wavell, 121–123.

  24 Louis, Imperialism at Bay, 509–510.

  25 Venkataramani and Shrivastava, Roosevelt Gandhi Churchill, 256–259.

  26 Moran, Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 273; Lewis, Changing Direction ,157–160; Sarila, The Shadow of the Great Game, 22, 181–182.

  27 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1013; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power,Vol. V, 826.

  28 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1044–1045; Moon, Wavell, 135–136; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 1073–1077, 1083–1086.

  29 Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 1222–1225.

  30 Ibid., 1128; Moon, Wavell, 157–158.

  31 Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. V, 1229.

  32 Sarila, The Shadow of the Great Game, 186; Moon, Wavell, 310, 168.

  33 Moran, Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 331; Moon, Wavell, 168.

  34 Bose and Bose, Netaji, Vol. 7, 228.

  35 Yadav and Seki, Subhas Chandra Bose, 120–125.

  36 WO 208/3812, “The Last Movements of S. C. Bose.” The spy appears to have been S. C. Goho, a Malayan of Indian origin. See WO 203/4673, War Dept. to HQ SEAC: “Confidential 12166,” October 1945.

  37 Bose and Bose, Netaji, Vol. 12, 212–222.

  38 Related to the author by former Congress worker Manos Banerjee.

  39 Nayar, “Satish Samanta Da,” 86; Mahapatro, “Ananya Sushilda,” 207.

  40 James, Raj, 595; Fay, The Forgotten Army, 516–517.

  41 James, Raj, 591.

  42 Batabyal, Communalism in Bengal, 133, 136.

  43 Read and Fisher, The Proudest Day, 393–396; Sarila, The Shadow of the Great Game, 224; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. VIII, 106–107; Singh, The Origins of the Partition of India, 592.

  44 Batabyal, Communalism in Bengal, 253; Singh, The Origins of the Partition of India, 185; Khosla, Stern Reckoning, 58–59; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. VIII, 298, 303.

  45 Batabyal, Communalism in Bengal, 250–253, 316, 322; Khosla, Stern Reckoning , 58; Singh, The Origins of the Partition of India, 182–183, Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. VIII, 302.

  46 Batabyal, Communalism in Bengal, 281, 321, 78–79, 293, 305–308.

  47 Gupta, In the Path of Service, 77, 93.

  48 Batabyal, Communalism in Bengal, 345; Gupta, In the Path of Service, 96.

  49 Gupta, In the Path of Service, 108.

  50 Moon, Wavell, 374; 322–23; quoted in Sarila, The Shadow of the Great Game, 225.

  51 Churchill and Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, Vol. VIII, 294–295.

  52 Wolpert, Gandhi’s Passion, 242.

  53 Gupta, In the Path of Service, 116.

  54 Kamtekar, “The Military Ingredient of Communal Violence in Punjab, 1947,” 568–572; Singh, “Imperial Defence and the Transfer of Power in India,” 569.

  55 Quoted in Gandhi, Collected Works, Vol. 97, 6.

  56 Gilbert, Winston S. Churchill, Vol. VIII, 248; Tunzelmann, Indian Summer, 127–128; Page et al., The Partition Omnibus, 305.

  57 James, Raj, 597.

  Chapter Twelve

  1 Reynolds, In Command of History, 39, 103, 125, 190, 195, 380, 399; Moran, Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 112; Churchill, The Second World War: Closing the Ring, 587.

  2 Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. IV, 461, 468, 725.

  3 Ibid., 1139.

  4 CSAC, Olaf M. Martin Papers, Memoir, 247 (pages 312–331 are missing); Mitra, Tin Kuri Dash, 167.

  5 Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. III, 509(footnote), and Vol. IV, 445(footnote); CAB 79/59, C.O.S. (43) 38th meeting, March 9, 1943.

  6 Woodhead, Famine Inquiry Commission, 108.

  7 Knight, Food Administration in India, 20; Dyson and Maharatna, “Excess Mortality During the Bengal Famine,” 290.

  8 Pati, Turbulent Times, 41; Ghosh, Famines in Bengal, 105–106; Gupta, Towards Freedom, Part I, 272; Nanavati Papers, Vol. II, 540. According to Ghosh, the chowkidar served as night watchman of his village; informer on the whereabouts of political fugitives and habitual criminals; office boy, domestic servant, and courier for local officials; shepherd for police officers’ cattle; guard for the neighborhood railway track when it conveyed dignitaries; caretaker and cook for the government guesthouse in the locale; guarantor of land rights and safe harvesting of crops; material witness for the Crown; compiler “of all official statistics relating to acreage and yield of all principal crops, livestock, carts and vehicles, sugar-cane crushers, ploughs and tractors, date and palm trees for production of molasses”; reporter of all market prices; and registrar for births and deaths.

  9 Symonds, In the Margins of Independence, 23.

  10 Maharatna, The Demography of Famines, 284–286.

  11 Woodhead, Famine Inquiry Commission, 109–110.

  12 Sen, Poverty and Famines, 202; Maharatna, The Demography of Famines, 147; Dyson and Maharatna, “Excess Mortality During the Bengal Famine,” 297.

  13 Rao, “Prasantha Chandra Mahalanobis 1893–1972,” 472; Greenough, Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal, 305.

  14 Mahalanobis, “Mortality in Bengal in 1943.”

  15 Guha, Health and Population in South Asia, 90.

  16 Bose, Agrarian Bengal, 151.

  17 Greenough, Prosperity and Misery in Modern Bengal, 309.

  18 Maharatna, The Demography of Famines, 143–144; Woodhead, Famine Inquiry Commission, 113. If infant deaths are 18 percent of the total, the remaining deaths must be 82 percent of the total. Since 82 percent of the mortality is 5.3, then 100 percent is 6.5.

  19 Marcus, “Famine Crimes in International Law,” 245–281; “Convention IV relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War,” August 12, 1949.

  20 Reynolds, In Command of History, 195; Hammond, Food, Vol. I, 281–282; Harrod, The Prof, 261–262; Mansergh, The Transfer of Power, Vol. III, 49.

  21 Sen, Development as Freedom, 1
6; Sen, Poverty and Famines, 80; Sen, “Wars and Famines.” Sen mistakenly believed, however, that the Government of India had no reason to anticipate the Bengal famine. He quoted the official estimate of the rice shortage as 140,000 tons, whereas the document to which he refers states 1.4 million tons.

  22 Cherwell Papers H305/9.

  23 Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 183–184.

  24 Barnes and Nicholson, The Empire at Bay, 1071, 1075.

  25 AMEL 1/6/32, File 2, April 30, 1947.

  26 Gopal, “Churchill and India,” 469.

  27 Moran, Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 333.

  28 Ibid., 394.

  29 Gopal, “Churchill and India,” 469.

  30 Moran, Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 195.

  31 Harrod, The Prof, 261; Birkenhead, The Professor and the Prime Minister, 11, 291, 279–280.

  32 Moran Papers, PP/CMW/K.1–5; Moran, Churchill: The Struggle for Survival, 499–500, 621.

  Index

  Acheson, Dean

  Adams, Brooks

  Afghanistan, World War II

  Afroz, Nazes

  All India Women’s Committee

  All Indian Women’s Conference

  Amery, John

  Amery, Leopold S.

  background

  Churchill and

  on Germany/Hitler

  Jewish people and

  Linlithgow and

  son

  Amery, Leopold S./India

  Americans and

  BBC radio speech

  blaming India

  colonial power and

  economics and

  famine causes

  famine cover-up

  famine warnings/aid requests

  Hitler-Churchill comparison

  partitioning/independence and

  secretary of state appointment

  sterling debt and

  views on Indians

  war supplies/strategies

  Wavell and

  Anandamath

  Anne, Queen

  Arendt, Hannah

  Asquith, Violet

  Atkinson, Fred J.

  Atlantic Charter

  Attlee, Clement

  Auchinlek, Claude

  army/famine and

  INA officers treason trial

  World War II

  Ba Maw

  Bajpai, Sir Girija

  Balfour Declaration (1917)

  Banerjee, Manos

  Bari, Radhakrishna

  Barnes, William A.

  Batabyal, Rakesh

  Bayly, Christopher

  Beaverbrook, Lord

  Begum, Kohinoor

  Behrens, C.B.A.

  Bengal

  1941 harvest/hunger marches

  army exclusion

  Chamber of Commerce

  during World War II

  European Group of legislators

  Muslim-Hindu populations/legislature

  Tamluk subdivision/Midnapore District

  Bengal famine (1940s)

  abandoned children

  aid denial

  Americans and

  Axis Powers and

  beggars’ removal from streets

  beginnings

  Britain grain “swap,”

  calories statistics

  cyclone/floods

  Denial Policy

  exporting grain and

  government denying shortages

  hoarding/stockpiles

  news of

  relief operation beginnings

  rice buying/prices

  rice denial

  stories

  transportation/boat denial

  See also Calcutta; Famines in India (1940s)

  Bengal famine (1940s) and wheat

  Bengal wheat use

  grinding and

  myths on

  “porridge” using

  shipment shortages

  Bengal Famine Code

  Bera, Haradhon

  Bera, Janoki

  Bera, Nayontara

  Bera family

  Bhaumik, Mani

  Bhoumik, Manoranjon

  Bibi, Fatema/family

  Bihar famine

  Biplabi newsletter

  Birkenhead, Lord

  Birth-rate

  criticism of India

  Malthus’s doctrine and

  Blair, James Richard

  Blood, Sir Bindon

  Bose, Subhas Chandra

  assassination order against

  Axis powers and

  background

  British authorities and

  death

  famine aid and

  farewell letter

  Hitler meeting

  imprisonment/“escape,”

  independence and

  Indian National Army

  National Congress and

  in Tokyo/Burma

  Bose, Sugata

  Bracken, Brendan

  Branson, Clive

  background

  Bengal and

  fighting

  Indian independence movement and

  on Indian poverty/famine

  war in India

  Braund, Henry B. L.

  Brave New World (Huxley)

  Brooke, Alan

  background

  Churchill and

  famine aid and

  Burgis, Lawrence

  Burma

  Bose’s meetings in

  World War II and

  Burman, Behula

  Burrows, Sir Frederick

  Butler, Richard A.

  Cairo conference

  Calcutta

  beggars’ removal from streets

  famine photos

  famine stories

  food supplies and

  importance to Britain

  Japanese bombing

  See also Bengal famine (1940s)

  Casablanca Conference

  Caste system, India

  Ceylon

  as British priority

  self-government and

  Chakrabarty, Dukhaharan Thakur

  Chakravarty, Nihar Chandra

  Chamberlain, Houston Stewart

  Chamberlain, Joseph

  Chamberlain, Neville

  Charles I, King

  Cherwell, Lord. See Lindemann, Frederick Alexander (Prof/Lord Cherwell)

  Chiang Kai-shek

  Chiang Kai-shek, Madame

  Cholera

  Chowkidars

  Churchill, John (Duke of Marlborough)

  Churchill, Randolph

  Churchill, Winston

  1945 elections

  1951 elections

  animal metaphors of

  background

  becoming prime minister

  Casablanca conference

  civilian advisers overview

  death

  Lindemann and

  lion metaphor

  military background

  military/war views

  My Early Life (autobiography)

  pneumonia

  popularity in U.S.

  postwar security

  Quebec meetings

  Stalin and

  stroke

  “white superiority” views

  World War II history and

  Yalta conference

  See also United Kingdom

  Churchill, Winston/India

  charging India for defense

  Commonwealth and

  dominion status and

  early travels

  on Gandhi

  Hindus vs. Muslims views

  Hitler comparison

  hostility toward India

  Indian disunity and

  Indian food problem committee

  internal security/rebellion fears

  Japan attacking and

  partitioning

  postwar reflection

  retaining India/Empire

  Viceroy’s Council/Simla talks

&n
bsp; Wavell and

  Willkie and

  See also United Kingdom

  Clive, Robert

  Clothing/materials during war

  Combined Food Board

  Communal Award

  Communist Party of India

  Communists and World War II

  Cornwallis’s reforms (1793)

  Cripps, Sir Stafford

  Cromwell, Oliver

  Crout, John

  Cunningham, George

  Curzon, Viceroy

  Cyclone (1942)

  British and

  description/effects

  relief

  D-Day

  Daily Mail

  Daily Telegraph

  Dakua, Khudiram

  Dakua, Kumudini

  Dhara and

  insurgencies

  Darwin, Charles

  Malthus and

  social Darwinism

  Das, Bhim

  Das, Hori

  Das, Pawnchanon/family

  Das, Srihorichandro

  Das, Sudam Chandra

  Dasi, Sabitri

  De Valera, Eamon

  Defence of India Act

  Denial Policy

  about

  boat denial

  rice denial

  Devi, Mahasweta

  Devi, Saroda

  Dhara, Sushil Kumar

  arrest/escape (1943)

  arrest/sentence (1944)

  arrests/imprisonment

  assassinations by

  Axis powers and

  background

  cyclone and

  death rumors

  Gandhian values and

  Gandhi’s surrender instructions and

  hopes of

  insurgencies

  life after independence

  Tamluk National Government

  Dhillon, Gurbux Singh

  Digby, William

  Direct Action Day

  Dominion status description

  India and

  Durga (madam)

  Dutt, Romesh Chunder

  Dyson, Tim

  Einstein, Albert

  Elizabeth, Queen

  Extraction rate (flour)

  Famine commission

  aid offers

  cover-up by

  death estimates

  explanations to

  lack of food riots

  ship use

  stockpiles

  wheat use

  Famines

  British colonies outside India (1943)

  democracies and

  Ireland

  war crimes and

  See also Starvation

  Famines in India

  1770

  1870s

  1897

  importing cereals (1930s)

  nineteenth-century deaths

  Victorian era vs. Mughal period

 

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