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Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes

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For example, in Northern India :"I do not understand this squeamishness about the use of gas … I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gases against uncivilised tribes".( https://www.theguardian.com/world/sho...). Or to take another example he thoughtfully suggested that the Tory election slogan for the 1955 general elections could be ‘Keep England White’. The book is described as "A coruscating portrait of Britain’s greatest imperialist." [1] Reception [ edit ] What is not a is a biography of Churchill. It is more a look of his policies/political actions and the effects of them.

In this volume, Ali also catalogues the many crimes committed by the British Empire including those in Ireland, Africa, the Middle East, and India. Throughout his life and career, Churchill was an apologist and defender of empire as well as an unrepentant racist and believer in white supremacy and the “civilized” races.

I do not understand this squeamishness about the use of gas…I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gases against uncivilized tribes”.

This seems to be, in essence, a hatchet job much like Shashi Tharoor’s Inglorious Empire - both these books are collections of selected stories (and in a number of instances are not even fact based) which are then invariably taken out of context. Perhaps in this post fact world, salaciousness sells better than reality and is certainly easier to churn out than proper scholarship. Essentially this is History at its worst. The cult of personality did not exist in his lifetime, as he was generally hated by the working class—not least for sending in the army to crush striking coal miners in Tonypandy and for using his position as editor of the government newspaper, the British Gazette, to print his anti-union and anti-socialist rants during the 1926 general strike. This explains his loss in the 1945 election, despite being the war leader.There are, according to Tariq Ali, around 1600 books on Churchill to choose from. It is worth betting that few if any of them will approach their subject from the same angle as this one. You will not find here praise for ‘Winston’ as the Tories love to call him (as if they had only bumped into him in their gentlemen’s club yesterday), nor talk of fighting on the beaches, nor praise for his ‘statesman-like’ qualities, his war heroism or his patriotic fervour. Instead, this is the story of the Winston Churchill the militant defender of empire, the master of domestic political repression and the enthusiast for war. Empire and war were in Churchill’s blood. Born into an aristocratic family at Blenheim Palace, cousin of the Duke of Marlborough, his right-wing politics were never in doubt. His poor academic record at Harrow school was no barrier to his career as a journalist and politician who was attracted to war and conflict wherever it arose. The record of Churchill as war leader needs some careful deconstructing. When war broke out in 1939, Britain was ruled by appeasers, who did not want war with Germany and who were both unwilling and ineffective in preparing for war. Less than a year previously, Chamberlain had allowed Hitler to take over part of Czechoslovakia at the time of Munich. In May 1940, when Britain had been defeated in Norway and defeat in France loomed, Chamberlain was forced out and Churchill replaced him as prime minister. He was not the first choice of the ruling class: the king and many Tories wanted the appeaser Halifax. When Churchill rose in his first speech as prime minister his own side was largely silent, while the Labour benches applauded. He governed in coalition with Labour during the war. That’s the sort of talk that will get you called a legend and lead to statues of you getting put up in the UK. This was Churchill talking about how he wished to deal with the men, women and children of Kurdistan. With the spate of recent movies and books dedicated to the cult of Winston Churchill, Tariq Ali offers a radical reassessment of the man and his inseparable relationship with his beloved British Empire.

Churchill was a man of his time and was also able to change his thinking across many issues - sadly this, and his intellect and character generally, are not captured in this book. Lindsey German welcomes Tariq Ali’s dismantling of the myth of the imperialist warmonger Churchill in Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes Tariq Ali, Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes (Verso 2022), 448pp. His crimes" are driven by Churchill's attempt to shore up the British Empire against the Bolshevik threat,which is repeated over and over as the spoils of empire are divided up or partitioned. History as polemic that occasionally loses its way down the murky paths of "his times" but nevertheless it is in the grand tradition of EP Thomson's later writing.There's so much to get your teeth into with Churchill, his aggressive stance against women voting, he changed political allegiances. He repeatedly used the army on his own civilians and had the navy on standby. His admiration for fascist dictators like Franco and Mussolini. His military incompetence which led to the mass slaughter of the ANZACs at Gallipoli. The slaughter of the Greeks after they had chased out the Nazis, which then led to Churchill and his Labour successors endorsing the Greek fascists, as they were anti-communist. The Bengal famine (between 3.5-5 million perished). He despised Indians and described Gandhi as a, “malignant subversive fanatic”. His integral part in helping violently overthrow the democratically elected Mossadegh in Iran in 1953 and the war crimes in Kenya. And of course let’s not forget his suggestion for the Tory election slogan for the 1955 general election, “Keep England White.” Note that Scotland, Wales and N Ireland don’t even factor in his thoughts?...Yes it’s safe to say that Winston Churchill has quite the CV. A view of Churchill from a left perspective, highlighting what others dare not mention, or at best, shove under the carpet, is a most welcome contribution about the so-called “great man” of British history. I have waited decades for this book. Of course this exists right up to the present day in England and as we saw in the recent leadership contest it is as bad as ever, with both candidates falling over themselves to compare themselves to Thatcher, who in turn liked to compare herself to Churchill. And yet all of these people are ridiculous, and they are no more like their predecessors than a child is like Superman just because they happen to don a costume at Halloween. There is a whole Churchill industry in this country, his memory is invoked by almost every politician that has walked through the gates of Parliament and his image is emblazoned across memorabilia from commemorative plates to tea towels and flags. To criticise him is to draw intakes of breath from those around you such is the secular sainthood that has been cast upon him. Historians both from his own lifetime and today have presented us with a one-sided view of the man who saved Britain from the Nazi’s and they have glossed over his own abhorrent actions and words. This book is a counter-balance to those right wing or liberal historians who have attempted to portray Churchill as a mixture of hero, genius and defender of freedom the world over, it is a timely polemic as our island nation drifts further to the right ideologically and becomes more and more cut off from a morality it once allegedly fought for. Even most of the political class hated his guts, especially because his career was spent opportunistically switching between the conservatives and liberals, whenever it suited his purpose. Leo Amery, his old friend, said of him, “On the subject of India, Winston is not quite sane … I don’t see much difference between his outlook and Hitler’s” (p. 261).

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