Deterrence, Coercion, and Appeasement presents a compelling and
original survey of British grand strategy in the inter-war period.
Whereas most existing accounts privilege either diplomacy and foreign
affairs, intelligence, or military affairs more narrowly, this study
underlines the inexorable relationships between foreign policy, grand
strategy, military force, intelligence, finance and not least,
domestic politics and public opinion. Britain was the world's only
global power in the inter-war period, and it confronted problems on a
global scale. Policy-makers sought two goals: peace with security.
They did so successfully in the 1920s, partly due to favourable
circumstances that made their task relatively easy, and partly because
they understood the strengths and limitations of British power and
knew how to wield them. The situation deteriorated rapidly in the
1930s, however, as the international system became increasingly
unfavourable to Britain. Policy-makers proved less adept than their
predecessors at meeting these new challenges, partly because those
challenges were more formidable, but also because they lacked the
self-confidence of their predecessors, who had held high office during
the most difficult years of the First World War and who lacked their
understanding of how to wield the lever of international power. The
study ends by providing a new and more sophisticated account of how
and why Neville Chamberlain appeased the fascist powers in the late
1930s, and why Winston Churchill opposed him and eventually supplanted
him in May 1940.
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British Grand Strategy, 1919-1940
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192678102
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter