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Profits of peaceProfits of peace

Profits of peace1996

Scott Newton

About this book

This bold new interpretation of Anglo-German appeasement challenges existing accounts, both orthodox and revisionist, by focusing on the economic motivations behind appeasement rather than on the workings of foreign policy. Scott Newton argues that appeasement stemmed from the determination of interwar administrations, particularly that of Neville Chamberlain, to protect the liberal-capitalist status quo established on the collapse of Lloyd George's attempts at reconstruction after 1918. Newton shows that the Government, aided and abetted by the Bank of England, the City, and large-scale industry, maintained its search for detente well beyond the outbreak of war, up until Churchill became Prime Minister in May 1940. The author goes on to reveal that certain circles within the establishment loyal to the prewar order continued their efforts to reach agreement with Germany even after 1940. The Hess affair represents the appeasers' last throw: the subsequent entry of the USSR and the USA into the conflict guaranteed the impossibility of a separate Anglo-German settlement, and combined with war socialism at home to open the door to a new era characterized by the welfare state and the Anglo-American special relationship.

Details

First published
1996
OL Work ID
OL2942481W

Subjects

Foreign relationsPolitics and governmentEconomic conditionsGreat britain, politics and government, 20th centuryGreat britain, economic conditions, 20th centuryGreat britain, foreign relations, 20th centuryGreat britain, foreign relations, germanyGermany, foreign relations, great britain

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