Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Home > Appeasement
World War II politicsAppeasement is a pejorative term for a strategic maneuver, based on either pragmatism, fear of war, or moral conviction, that leads to acceptance of imposed conditions in preference to defending against aggressors. Since World War II, the term has generally negative connotations of weakness and cowardice, and people rarely use it to describe policies they support and tend to use it to label policies that they oppose.
Because the term has highly negative connotations, it is difficult to
cite many historical examples which are widely regarded as appeasement.
The one historical situation in which the term is universally applied
to is British policy toward Nazi Germany before World War II.
1 Appeasement of Hitler
By far the most well-known case of appeasement is one which ultimately failed - the appeasement of Adolf Hitler's Germany by United Kingdom Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain's government in the late 1930s. The Munich Agreement in particular stands as a major example of appeasement.
There is a massive historical debate about the foreign policy of the 1930s. The 1940 polemic Guilty Men has been highly influential here. See pages current Dispute:Adam von Trott zu Solz .See Pope Pius X11 ( Cardinal Pacelli }.
1.1 Reasons why the British government appeased Hitler
- Memories of the First World War - The United Kingdom and especially France were extremely reluctant to fight due to the psychological trauma resulting from having witnessed the mass deaths of vast numbers of young people. For example, many British urban centres lost up to 40% of all young men; many families lost all their sons and most young male relatives. King George V famously said that he would rather abdicate and stand in Trafalgar Square in central LondonLondon is the capital of the United Kingdom and of England, and with over seven million inhabitants in the Greater London area, is the second-most populous conurbation in Europe (after Moscow). From being Londinium the capital of the Roman province of Bri, singing 'The Red Flag' (the socialist and communist anthem) than allow his country go through another war like 1914Events January 4 77 seal hunters freeze to death on ice near Labrador January 5 Ford Motor Company announces an eight-hour workday and a minimum wage of $5 for a day's labor February 13 Copyright: In New York City the ASCAP (for American Society of Compos- 1918Events January January 8 President Woodrow Wilson announces his " Fourteen Points" for the aftermath of World War I. February February 3 The Twin Peaks Tunnel begins service in San Francisco as the longest streetcar tunnel in the world (11,920 feet long)..
- Fear of strategic bombingStrategic bombing is a military strategem used in a total war style campaign that attempts to destroy the economic ability of a nation-state to wage war. It is a systematically organized and executed attack from the air. It is different from the tactical - In 1934Events January-April January 1 Alcatraz becomes a federal prison. January 7 First Flash Gordon comic strip is published. January 10 Execution of Marinus van der Lubbe January 24 Einstein visits White House January 26 The Apollo Theater opens in Harlem, Ne the British MP Stanley BaldwinStanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley ( August 3, 1867 December 14, 1947) was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on three separate occasions. Early Life Born at Bewdley in Worcestershire he was educated at Harrow and Cambridge, and went into the declared that "I think it is well for the man on the street to realize that there is no power on earth that can protect him from being bombed.........the bomber will always get through." Bombers were widely viewed as invincible superweapons capable of laying waste to whole countries - comparable to how nuclear ICBMs are viewed today. This fear was stoked by apocalyptic visions such as those in the H. G. Wells book The Shape of Things to Come , and its movie adaptation Things to Come.
- The flaws of the Treaty of Versailles - The Treaty of Versailles imposed many restrictions on internal German affairs, which were later on widely viewed by the Allied nations as being unfair to Germany. Many people, especially on the left of the political spectrum, argued that German re-armament, the re-occupation of the Rhineland and the acquisition of the Saarland were merely examples of the Germans taking back what was rightfully theirs. They also believed that since Versailles had created the states of Poland and Czechoslovakia on the basis of self-determination, it was unjust to deny the opportunity of Austrians and Sudetenlanders to join Germany if they so wished. Because Hitler had not taken any obviously non-German territory as of 1938, a war launched by the Allies at this stage would have been a war launched merely on the basis of suspicion, in which Britain would be deeply divided. This could have been fatal if the war had gone badly for the Allies - as indeed happened in 1940. By 1939 Hitler had annexed the very non-German city of Prague - meaning that self-determination could no longer be used to justify his actions. This made a decision to go to war in 1939 far easier than in 1938.
- The Communist threat - Conservative politicians had to worry not only about the threat posed by Hitler's Germany, but also about the threat posed by the Stalinist Soviet Union - as the Holocaust had not yet occurred, they mostly regarded Stalin as the greater of the two totalitarian evils. The fact that the United States was at the time in an extremely isolationist phase made the sitution even more difficult. They feared that as Britain and France were busy fighting Germany in the West, the Soviets would invade Poland and then eastern Germany. After the "War of German Suppression" Germans and Allies alike would be at the mercy of the Soviet Union, essentially " 1945 without the United States or the atomic bomb".
- Failure to recognize the evil of Nazism - It was not immediately obvious that the Nazi regime in Germany was worse than the other dictatorships which ruled Central and Eastern Europe in the 1930s. Even Winston Churchill, while recognizing the military threat posed by a re-armed Germany, was slow to recognize the inherent evil of Nazism itself. As late as 1938 he wrote to The Times that "I have always said that I hoped if Great Britain were beaten in a war we should find a Hitler who would lead us back to our rightful place among nations". Even if a 1938 war against Germany was won, the most likely regime to replace the Nazis would be a military dictatorship - not an obvious improvement on the Nazi regime, as far as could be ascertained at the time. Alternatively, a post-Nazi Germany could have swung leftward, forcing the Western democracies to fight a German-Soviet alliance.
- Support for the League of Nations - The League of Nations was designed to prevent future wars. If there were no wars to be fought then there would be no need to maintain armaments, and any disagreements could be settled with by the League of Nations. The Peace Ballot of 1935, conducted by the League of Nations Union (a political pressure group of the time) showed support for the League, although it should be noted that this was a select group that voted and not a national referendum. When asked "should Britain remain a member of the League of Nations?", 97% voted in favour of staying in the League. When asked "Do you consider that, if a nation insists on attacking another, the other nations should combine to stop it by economic and non-military measures?", 94.1% voted in favour. However, there was greater division over whether force should be used to stop an aggressive nation, only 74.2% voted in favour, showing a greater division over the use of force.
- The Economic Impact of World War I - The national debt of Britain increased tenfold during the war, and the increase of British government debt to foreign governments during WWI mainly to America led to a high interest rate being charged. The Britsih government therefore had to try to cut back on spending, and the public would not stomach cutting back on domestic spending. The Geddes Committee of 1921-22 recommended that the armed forces and weapons be reduced, but this would eventually lead to a time delay when it came to rearmament during the 1930s. The price of rearming would have a crippling effect on the British government, and so the avoidance of war was a sound economic policy.
Read more »