This distinguished book offers fresh perspectives on British appeasement, grand strategy, and policymaking in a crucial and much-debated period of history. Innovative in both his interpretation and his method, Gaines Post, Jr., reexamines how British leaders planned foreign policy and imperial defense as they faced the increasing likelihood of war with the dictatorial regimes of Germany, Italy, and Japan. He clarifies the ways in which the dynamics of the machinery of government affected the choice of policies, delimited the management of crises, and restricted the pace of rearmament.
Post provides a novel and intricate synthesis of what we know about British foreign policy in the 1930s: rearmament, deterrence, decisionmaking, and the question of timing. Analyzing the Ethiopian and Rhineland crises as case studies, he shows how they defeated British efforts to develop a comprehensive strategy of conventional and extended deterrence. London's unsuccessful attempts to deter Hitler and Mussolini, he demonstrates, were frustrated by confusion in the decisionmaking machinery of government, by conflicting notions of how to buy time, by unpredictable international crises, and by the plans of Neville Chamberlain for correlating airpower, economic stability at home, and conciliation overseas.
Challenging the generally accepted interpretation of British grand strategy in the 1930s, Dilemmas of Appeasement will be important reading for historians, especially of modern Britain and Europe, political scientists, and defense studies specialists.
MANSERGH, N., Survey of British Commonwealth Affairs: Problems of External Policy, 1931–9 (Oxford, 1952). ... MURFETT, M.H., Fool Proof Relations: the Search for Anglo-American Naval Co-operation During the Chamberlain Years, ...
"A new history of the British appeasement of the Third Reich on the eve of World War II"--
British Appeasement and the Origins of World War II
The book sets Chamberlain's actions within a wider chronological framework and takes a fresh look at the underlying influences on the policy of appeasement within British society. Distributed in the US by St. Martin's Press.
Appeasement in International Politics suggests the type of appeasement strategy most appropriate for various situations. The options range from pure inducements, reciprocity, to a mixture of inducements and threats.
The Politics and Economics of Appeasement: British Foreign Policy in the 1930s
J.-M. Renaitour, Vive le sport! (Paris: Fernand Sorlot, 1934). The book is dedicated to Des- grange and opens with the Pajol story. 11. A. Obey, L'orgue du stade (Paris: Gallimard, 1924). For the role of the Tour de France, ...
A reexamination of Neville Chamberlain's appeasement policy, this study challenges prevailing images of Chamberlain as a tragic hero—a man of peace, naively impressed by the dictators, who did his best...
This book examines Lloyd George’s attitudes to Germany during the inter-war period and beyond.
U.S. use of force since 1945 has been significantly influenced by the perceived consequences of appeasing Hitler in the 1930s, and from the mid-1970s to 2001 by the chilling effect of the Vietnam War.