Winston's War: Churchill, 1940-1945
Winston's War: Churchill, 1940-1945 book cover

Winston's War: Churchill, 1940-1945

Paperback – May 3, 2011

Price
$18.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
608
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307388711
Dimensions
5.16 x 1.18 x 7.98 inches
Weight
1.21 pounds

Description

“An important fresh take. . . . Splendidly told. . . . With great skill and felicity, Hastings has given us a rich account and analysis of Churchill and his role in the Second World War. . . . I would recommend it highly both to those who wish an introduction to the subject and to the many who can’t get enough of reading about the war and about Churchill.”—Peter Stansky, San Francisco Chronicle “Hastings is exemplary, as readers of Armageddon and Retribution , his books on the defeat of Germany and Japan, will know, and this book is just as good.”— The New York Times “Excellent. . . . Hastings is an authoritative writer and Winston’s War is what readers have come to expect from him: exhaustively researched, scrupulously fair and balanced, and compulsively readable. . . . [Hastings] gives equal attention to Churchill’s greatness and his shortcomings, his achievements and his blunders. Despite the small library of books about this legendary figure, he offers fresh insights on every page. . . . Quite simply, this is a marvelous book.”’— The Christian Science Monitor “A magnificent achievement. . . . Fresh and different. . . . One of those rare books that create in the reader a palpable feeling of the excitement, fear, frustration, grief, dread, all-too-occasional elation, and numbing fatigue of those critical days.”— New York Review of Books “Hastings captures Churchill’s mix of charm, exhibitionism, sentimentality, and egotism. . . . [He] writes with the calm and authority that come from long experience and wide reading.”— Times Literary Supplement (London)xa0“Hastings presents [Churchill] . . . as a ruthless, brandy-gulping Tory with the fire and the guts to beat Hitler. . . . In a crowded field, this is one of the best books ever written about Churchill.”—Piers Brendon, The Sunday Times (London)xa0“A vivid and incisive portrait. . . . Winston’s War captures the full range of Churchill’s endlessly fascinating character. . . . Hastings rejects the traditional Churchill hagiography while still managing to capture what he calls Churchill’s ‘appetite for the fray.’”— The Washington Times Hastings steps back to take a long view of Churchill and put the man’s record in perspective. The result works wonderfully. . . . But Hastings goes out of his way to portray Churchill as a real human being, with foibles and quirks and a marvelous way with words, even off the cuff. . . . Winston’s War weaves it all together in a literate and thoughtful fashion. It’s a careful portrait of a man who still fascinates us almost half a century past his death.”— St. Louis Post-Dispatch “Hastings is an accomplished historian who knows World War II and other wars in and out. He uses a broad range of sources, including diaries of ordinary citizens, to put his subject into a public context.”— The Seattle Times “A compelling argument for viewing Winston Churchill as more of a statesman than a strategist. . . . Winston’s War skillfully blends biographical detail with military and diplomatic history, and provides a better appreciation of Churchill’s critical role in making future generations regard the European struggle of 1940-1945 as the Last Good War.”— The Providence Journal “It is phenomenally difficult to unearth fresh stories and anecdotes about a man as widely and deeply covered historically as Winston Churchill, yet Hastings succeeds again and again. . . . None can fail to admire his archival tenacity and sheer authorial reach.”—Andrew Roberts, The Daily Telegraph (London)xa0“An impressive book, full of judicious asides . . . it deserves a wide readership.”— United States Naval Institute “A rich and rewarding book, the fruit of many years of reflection on the conduct of war. It is enlivened by countless insights on matters great and small, and by a spare, trenchant style which holds the reader’s attention.”— The Spectator “Scrupulously fair and often deeply moving. . . . Hastings excels with all his character portraits, which brilliantly illuminate the key relationships, especially with Roosevelt and Stalin. Hastings is truly a master of strategy and high command.”— Mail on Sunday (London) Max Hastings is the author of more than twenty books, including Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes to War, Inferno: The World at War, 1939–1945, and Winston's War: Churchill 1940-1945. He spent his early career as a foreign correspondent for BBC TV and various newspapers, then as editor of Britain’s Evening Standard and Daily Telegraph . He has received numerous awards for both his books and his journalism. He lives in the English countryside west of London. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. IntroductionChurchill was the greatest Englishman and one of the greatest human beings of the twentieth century, indeed of all time. Yet, beyond that bald assertion, there are infinite nuances in considering his conduct of Britain’s war between 1940 and 1945, which is the theme of this book. It originated nine years ago, when Roy Jenkins was writing his biography of Churchill. Roy flattered me by inviting my comments on the typescript, chapter by chapter. Some of my suggestions he accepted; many he sensibly ignored.When we reached the Second World War, his patience expired. Exasperated by the profusion of my strictures, he said: “You’re trying to get me to do something which you should write yourself, if you want to!” By that time, his health was failing. He was impatient to finish his own book, which achieved triumphant success before his death.In the years which followed, I thought much about Churchill and the war, mindful of some Boswellian lines about Samuel Johnson: “He had once conceived the thought of writing The Life Of Oliver Crom - well . . . He at length laid aside his scheme, on discovering that all that can be told of him is already in print; and that it is impracticable to procure any authentick information in addition to what the world is already possessed of.” Among the vast Churchillian bibliography, I was especially apprehensive about venturing anywhere near the tracks of David Reynolds’s extraordinarily original and penetrating 2005 In Command of History. The author dissected successive drafts of Churchill’s war memoirs, exposing contrasts between judgements on people and events which the old statesman initially proposed to make, and those which he finally deemed it prudent to publish. Andrew Roberts has painted a striking portrait of wartime Anglo-American relations in his 2009 Masters and Commanders. We have been told more about Winston Churchill than any other human being. Tens of thousands of people of many nations have recorded even trifling encounters, noting every word which they heard him utter. The most vivid wartime memory of one soldier of Britain’s Eighth Army derived from a day in 1942 when he found the prime minister his neighbour in a North African desert latrine. Churchill’s speeches and writings fill many volumes.Yet much remains opaque, because he wished it thus. Always mindful of his role as a stellar performer upon the stage of history, he became supremely so after May 10, 1940. He kept no diary because, he observed, to do so would be to expose his follies and inconsistencies to posterity.Within months of his ascent to the premiership, however, he told his staff that he had already schemed the chapters of the book which he would write as soon as the war was over. The outcome was a ruthlessly partial six-volume work which is poor history, if sometimes peerless prose. We shall never know with complete confidence what he thought about many personalities—for instance Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Brooke, King George VI, his Cabinet colleagues—because he took good care not to tell us. Churchill’s wartime relationship with the British people was much more complex than is often acknowledged. Few denied his claims upon the premiership. But between the end of the Battle of Britain in 1940 and El Alamein in November 1942, not only many ordinary citizens, but also some of his closest colleagues wanted operational control of the war machine to be removed from his hands, and some other figure appointed to his role as minister of defence. It is hard to overstate the embarrassment and even shame of the British people, as they perceived the Russians playing a heroic part in the struggle against Nazism, while their own army seemed incapable of winning a battle. To understand Britain’s wartime experience, it appears essential to recognise, as some narratives do not, the sense of humiliation which afflicted Britain amid the failures of its soldiers, contrasted—albeit often on the basis of wildly false information—with the achievements of Stalin.Churchill was dismayed by the performance of the British Army, even after victories began to come at the end of 1942. Himself a hero, he expected others likewise to show themselves heroes. In 1940, the people of Britain, together with their navy and air force, wonderfully fulfilled his hopes. Thereafter, however, much of the story of Britain’s part in the war seems to me that of the prime minister seeking more from his nation’s warriors than they could deliver. The failure of the army to match the prime minister’s aspirations is among the central themes of this book. Much discussion of Britain’s military effort in World War II focuses upon Churchill’s relationship with his generals. In my view, this preoccupation is overdone. The difficulties of fighting the Germans and Japanese went much deeper than could be solved by changes of commanders. The British were beaten again and again between 1940 and 1942, and continued to suffer battlefield difficulties thereafter, in consequence of failures of tactics, weapons, equipment and culture even more significant than lack of mass or inspired leadership. The gulf between Churchillian aspiration and reality extended to the peoples of occupied Europe, hence his faith in “setting Europe ablaze” through the agency of Special Operations Executive, which had malign consequences that he failed to anticipate. SOE armed some occupied peoples to fight more energetically against one another in 1944–45 than they had done earlier against the Germans.It is a common mistake to suppose that those who bestrode the stage during momentous times were giants, set apart from the personalities of our own humdrum society. I have argued in earlier books that we should instead see 1939–45 as a period when men and women not much different from ourselves strove to grapple with stresses and responsibilities which stretched their powers to the limit. Churchill was one of a tiny number of actors who proved worthy of the role in which destiny cast him. Those who worked for the prime minister, indeed the British people at war, served as a supporting cast, seeking honourably but sometimes inadequately to play their own parts in the wake of a titan.Sir Edward Bridges, then cabinet secretary, wrote of Churchill between 1940 and 1942: “Everything depended upon him and him alone. Only he had the power to make the nation believe that it could win.” This remains the view of most of the world, almost seventy years later. Yet there is also no shortage of iconoclasts. In a recent biography Cambridge lecturer Nigel Knight writes contemptuously of Churchill: “He was not mad or simple; his misguided decisions were a product of his personality—a mixture of arrogance, emotion, self-indulgence, stubbornness and a blind faith in his own ability.” Another modern biographer, Chris Wrigley, suggests that Sir Edward Bridges’s tribute to Churchill “may overstate his indispensability.”Such strictures seem otiose to those of us convinced that, in his absence, Britain would have made terms with Hitler after Dunkirk.Thereafter, beyond his domestic achievement as war leader, he performed a diplomatic role of which only he was capable: as suitor of the United States on behalf of the British nation. To fulfil this, he was obliged to overcome intense prejudices on both sides of the Atlantic. So extravagant was Churchill’s—and Roosevelt’s—wartime rhetoric about the Anglo-American alliance that even today the extent of mutual suspicion and indeed dislike between the two peoples is often underestimated. The British ruling class, in particular, condescended amazingly towards Americans.In 1940–41, Winston Churchill perceived, with a clarity which eluded some of his fellow countrymen, that only American belligerence might open a path to victory. Pearl Harbor, and not the prime minister’s powers of seduction, eventually brought Roosevelt’s nation into the war. But no other statesman could have conducted British policy towards the United States with such consummate skill, nor have achieved such personal influence upon the American people. This persisted until 1944, when his standing in the United States declined precipitously, to revive only when the onset of the Cold War caused many Americans to hail Churchill as a prophet. His greatness, which had come to seem too large for his own impoverished country, then became perceived as a shared Anglo- American treasure.From June 1941 onwards, Churchill saw much more clearly than most British soldiers and politicians that Russia must be embraced as an ally. But it seems important to strip away legends about aid to the Soviet Union, and acknowledge how small this was in the decisive 1941–42 period. Stalin’s nation saved itself with little help from the Western Allies. Only from mid- 1943 onwards did supplies to Russia gain critical mass, and Anglo- American ground operations absorb a significant part of the Wehrmacht’s attention.The huge popularity of the Soviet Union in wartime Britain was a source of dismay, indeed exasperation, to the small number of people at the top who knew the truth about the barbarity of Stalin’s regime, its implacable hostility to the West and its imperialistic designs on eastern Europe. The divide between the sentiments of the public and those of the prime minister towards the Soviet Union became a chasm in May 1945. One of Churchill’s most astonishing acts, in the last weeks of his premiership, was to order the Joint Planning Staff to produce a draft for Operation Unthinkable. The resulting document considered the practicability of launching an Anglo- American offensive against the Russians, with forty-seven divisions reinforced by the remains of Hitler’s Wehrmacht, to restore the freedom of Poland. Though Churchill acknowledged this as a remote contingency, it is remarkable that he caused the Chiefs of Staff to address it at all.I am surprised how few historians seem to notice that many things which the British and Americans believed they were concealing from the Soviets—for instance, Bletchley Park’s penetration of Axis ciphers and Anglo-American arguments about launching a Second Front—were wellknown to Stalin, through the good offices of Communist sympathisers and traitors in Whitehall and Washington. The Soviets knew vastly more about their allies’ secret policy making than did the British and Americans about that of the Russians.It is fascinating to study public mood swings through wartime British, American and Russian newspapers and the diaries of ordinary citizens. These often give a very different picture from that of historians, with their privileged knowledge of how the story ended. As for sentiment at the top, some men who were indifferent politicians or commanders contributed much more as contemporary chroniclers. The diaries of such figures as Hugh Dalton, Leo Amery and Lt. Gen. Henry Pownall make them more valuable to us as eyewitnesses and eavesdroppers than they seemed to their contemporaries as players in the drama.Maj. Gen. John Kennedy, for much of the war the British Army’s director of military operations, kept a diary which arguably ranks second only to that of Gen. Sir Alan Brooke for its insights into the British military high command. On January 26, 1941, in the darkest days of the conflict, Kennedy expressed a fear that selective use of accounts of the meetings of Britain’s leaders might mislead posterity:It would be easy by a cunning or biased selection of evidence to give the impression for instance that the P.M.’s strategic policy was nearly always at fault, & that it was only by terrific efforts that he is kept on the right lines—and it would be easy to do likewise with all the chiefs of staff. The historian who has to deal with the voluminous records of this war will have a frightful task. I suppose no war has been so well documented. Yet the records do not often reveal individual views. It is essentially a government of committees . . . Winston is of course the dominating personality & he has in his entourage and among his immediate advisers no really strong personality. Yet Winston’s views do not often prevail if they are contrary to the general trend of opinion among the service staffs. Minutes flutter continually from Winston’s typewriter on every conceivable subject. His strategic imagination is inexhaustible and many of his ideas are wild and unsound and impracticable. . . but in the end they are killed if they are not acceptable.These observations, made in the heat of events, deserve respect from every historian of the period. Another banal and yet critical point is that circumstances and attitudes shifted. The prime minister often changed his mind, and deserves more credit than he sometimes receives for his willingness to do so. Meanwhile, others vacillated in their views of him. Some who revered Churchill in the first months of his premiership later became bitterly sceptical, and vice versa. After Dunkirk, Britain’s middle classes were considerably more staunch than some members of its traditional ruling caste, partly because they knew less about the full horror of the country’s predicament. History perceives as pivotal Britain’s survival through 1940, so that the weariness and cynicism which pervaded the country by 1942, amid continuing defeats, are often underrated. Industrial unrest, manifested through strikes especially in the coalfields and in the aircraft and shipbuilding industries, revealed fissures in the fabric of national unity which are surprisingly seldom acknowledged.This book does not seek to retell the full story of Churchill at war, but rather to present a portrait of his leadership from the day on which he became prime minister, May 10, 1940, set in the context of Britain’s national experience. It is weighted towards the first half of the conflict, partly because Churchill’s contribution was then much greater than it became later, and partly because I have sought to emphasise issues and events about which there seem new things to be said.I have written relatively little in this book about the strategic air offensive, having addressed this earlier in Bomber Command and Armageddon. I have here confined myself to discussion of the prime minister’s personal role in key bombing decisions. I have not described land and naval campaigns in detail, but instead considered the institutional cultures which influenced the performance of the British Army, the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force (RAF), and the three services’ relationships with the prime minister.To maintain coherence, it is necessary to address some themes and episodes which are familiar, though specific aspects deserve reconsideration. There was, for instance, what I have called the second Dunkirk, no less miraculous than the first. Churchill’s biggest misjudgement of 1940 was his decision to send more troops to France in June after the rescue of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) from the beaches. Only the stubborn insistence of their commander, Lt. Gen. Sir Alan Brooke, made it possible to overcome the rash impulses of the prime minister and evacuate almost 200,000 men who would otherwise have been lost.The narrative examines some subordinate issues and events in which the prime minister’s role was crucial, such as the strategic contribution of SOE (as distinct from romantic tales of its agents’ derring- do), the Dodecanese campaign and Churchill’s Athens adventure in December 1944. I have attempted little original research in his own papers. Instead, I have explored the impression he made upon others—generals, soldiers, citizens, Americans and Russians. Moscow’s closure of key archives to foreign researchers has curtailed the wonderful bonanza of the post–Cold War period. But much important material has now been published in Russiandocumentary collections.It seems mistaken to stint on quotation from Alan Brooke, John Colville and Charles Wilson (Lord Moran), merely because their records have been long in the public domain. Recent research on Moran’s manuscript suggests that, rather than being a true contemporary record, much of it was written up afterwards. Yet most of his anecdotes and observations appear credible. The diaries of Churchill’s military chief, junior private secretary and doctor provide, for all their various limitations, the most intimate testimony we shall ever have about Churchill’s wartime existence.He himself, of course, bestrides the tale in all his joyous splendour. Even at the blackest periods, when his spirits sagged, flashes of exuberance broke through, which cheered his colleagues and contemporaries, but caused some people to recoil from him. They were dismayed, even disgusted, that he so conspicuously thrilled to his own part in the greatest conflict in human history. “Why do we regard history as of the past and forget we are making it?” he exulted to Australian prime minister Robert Menzies in 1941. It was this glee which caused such a man as the aesthete and diarist James Lees- Milne to write fastidiously after it was all over:“Churchill so evidently enjoyed the war that I could never like him. I merely acknowledge him, like Genghis Khan, to have been great.”Lees-Milne and like-minded critics missed an important aspect of Churchill’s attitude to conflict in general, and to the Second World War in particular. He thrilled to the cannon’s roar, and rejoiced in its proximity to himself. Yet never for a moment did he lose his sense of dismay about the death and destruction which war visited upon the innocent. “Ah, horrible war, amazing medley of the glorious and the squalid, the pitiful and the sublime,” he wrote as a correspondent in South Africa in January 1900. “If modern men of light and leading saw your face closer simple folk would see it hardly ever.” Hitler was indifferent to the sufferings his policies imposed upon mankind. Churchill never flinched from the necessity to pay in blood for the defeat of Nazi tyranny. But his sole purpose was to enable the guns to be silenced, the peoples of the world restored to their peaceful lives.Appetite for the fray was among Churchill’s most convincing credentials for national leadership in May 1940. Neville Chamberlain had many weaknesses as prime minister, but foremost among them was a revulsion from the conflict to which his country was committed, shared by many members of his government. One of them, Rob Bernays, said: “I wish I were twenty. I cannot bear this responsibility.” A nation which found itself committed to a life- and- death struggle against one of the most ruthless tyrannies in history was surely wise to entrust its leadership to a man eager to embrace the role, rather than one who shrank from it. This book discusses Churchill’s follies and misjudgements, which were many and various. But these are as pimples upon the mountain of his achievement. It is sometimes said that the British and American peoples are still today, in the twenty-first century, indecently obsessed with the Second World War. The reason is not far to seek. We know that here was something which our parents and grandparents did well, in a noble cause that will forever be identified with the person of Winston Churchill, warlord extraordinary.Chilton Foliat, BerkshireJanuary 2009 Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A vivid and incisive portrait of Winston Churchill during wartime from acclaimed historian Max Hastings,
  • Winston’s War
  • captures the full range of Churchill’s endlessly fascinating character. At once brilliant and infuriating, self-important and courageous, Hastings’s Churchill comes brashly to life as never before. Beginning in 1940, when popular demand elevated Churchill to the role of prime minister, and concluding with the end of the war, Hastings shows us Churchill at his most intrepid and essential, when, by sheer force of will, he kept Britain from collapsing in the face of what looked like certain defeat. Later, we see his significance ebb as the United States enters the war and the Soviets turn the tide on the Eastern Front. But Churchill, Hastings reminds us, knew as well as anyone that the war would be dominated by others, and he managed his relationships with the other Allied leaders strategically, so as to maintain Britain’s influence and limit Stalin’s gains. At the same time, Churchill faced political peril at home, a situation for which he himself was largely to blame. Hastings shows how Churchill nearly squandered the miraculous escape of the British troops at Dunkirk and failed to address fundamental flaws in the British Army. His tactical inaptitude and departmental meddling won him few friends in the military, and by 1942, many were calling for him to cede operational control. Nevertheless, Churchill managed to exude a public confidence that brought the nation through the bitter war. Hastings rejects the traditional Churchill hagiography while still managing to capture what he calls Churchill’s “appetite for the fray.” Certain to be a classic,
  • Winston’s War
  • is a riveting profile of one of the greatest leaders of the twentieth century.

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Excellent portrait of Churchill in wartime

Winston's War is an astonishing feat--it chronicles the activities, thoughts, ideals, politics, relationships, and personality of a man through five long, complex years and does so without becoming boring or losing sight of some one of these parts of the man. The man is Winston Churchill and Max Hastings has done a remarkable job of describing Churchill's experience during World War II.

Hastings follows Churchill through the war closely, especially during the tense first days of Churchill's premiership and through the American commitment to Europe in North Africa. I won't recapitulate the chronology here--it would bore those already familiar with World War II and just be so many unfamiliar names to those who aren't. The impression gained from this book is that through all five years Churchill was constantly on the go, moving between the headquarters of various generals, the ministries in London, and overseas meetings with his allies, Roosevelt and Stalin. The constant balancing act Churchill faced--as politician, PM, diplomat, strategist, and human being--would have destroyed a lesser man, and Hastings evokes the myriad demanding duties well.

The book had two great strengths. The first was the attention Hastings gave to lesser-known operations. This must come with the territory, as Churchill was notoriously fond of derring do like commando raids and sabotage. But Churchill also pushed for, planned, and executed several large-scale but little-known missions during the war. There were, for instance, the "second Dunkirk" during late June of 1940, during which more British troops trapped in France were evacuated, and the disastrous invasion of the Aegean in 1943. Churchill's campaign into the Dodecanese, the Greek isles, meant to bring the Turks into the war on the Allied side but was ill-planned and even more ill-fated, reminding many of his botched Gallipoli campaign in the same sea during World War I. He also urged constantly the creation and supply of resistance groups in occupied Europe, the usefulness of which--in light of terrible German reprisals--is still debated. Hastings clearly illustrates the complexity of Allied planning, as numerous proposed or planned operations came to nothing.

The book's second strength was Hastings's focus on Churchill the man. It is easy for historians to forget that their subjects got tired, sick, cranky, drunk, or jokey, but Hastings always keeps Churchill as human being in the foreground. He reminds us that, though Churchill is now an inspirational icon, he was an old man. He was moody. He kept odd hours. He was by turns abrupt and affectionate. His health was a constant worry. And he wasn't always popular--in fact, political enemies agitated constantly for his removal from the premiership during the last half of the war. Churchill's story is often one of frustration, especially after the Americans entered the war. Roosevelt, to whom Churchill gave enormous attention early on in the hopes of currying American favor, shunned and ignored Churchill more and more in favor of Stalin. Stalin, who knew Churchill hated the Soviets, was inscrutable but clearly enjoyed the favor he found with Roosevelt at Churchill's expense. Churchill was always the least of the Big Three and he knew it, and his frustration with Stalin and especially Roosevelt was pitiful.

Winston's War, of course, is not solely about Winston, and Hastings does an excellent job of describing the personalities and relationships between the many figures--important or not--who interacted with Churchill. As I said, I won't bother with specifics of chronology here. The best thing I can say is to read Winston's War. Max Hastings has written an enormously detailed and engaging book on one of the most important figures in modern history.

Highly recommended.
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A warrior was needed to confront the impending threat of subjugation

Winston Churchill has for many years been a hero and an inspiration to me. He was multi-dimensional: warrior, politician, gifted writer, orator, painter, and unconventional character. In 1940, Britain was one of the world's preeminent powers (before the post-war ascendancy of the United States and the Soviet Union). I had voraciously read Churchill's six-volume memoir of the Second World War and his History of the English-Speaking Peoples. I have read numerous biographies such as The Last Lion, Churchill: A Study in Failure 1900-1939, and Franklin and Winston. Now here is another biography, which from the onset provides fresh insights into Churchill's impact during the war, beginning with his appointment as wartime Prime Minister by the king during May 1940 - a warrior was needed! British expeditionary forces were already in France striving to halt the German blitzkrieg through Belgium, and would soon find themselves being evacuated from Dunkirk. Western Europe was reeling and facing impending defeat.

Yet one man, with doubters all around him, refused to concede defeat. By his steadfast courage, wit, and groundless optimism, Churchill infused the British people with an astonishing attitude of defiance. After the fall of France, Britain stood alone against the Axis Powers. Churchill went through excruciating moments during this time, as Max Hastings reveals that Churchill, as early as the summer of 1940, uttered his prophetic conviction that the United States would come to the aid of the Allies. Hastings states that Churchill's "supreme achievement in 1940 was to mobilize Britain's warriors, to shame into silence its doubters, and to stir the passions of the nation." Hastings astutely writes: "As Churchill always recognized, modern war is waged partly on battlefields, and partly also on airwaves, front pages and in the hearts of men and women."

At the onset, Britain required both its Navy and its Royal Air Force (RAF) to prevent a German invasion. The odds seemed slim, but strategic plans were put in place, and against all odds the pilots of the RAF, fighting with intrepid tenacity, won the Battle of Britain by the end of 1940, the first British victory of the war, which gave assurance to Americans that Britain would not fall. Yet Britain would stand alone for nearly a year and a half before the Soviet Union battled the Germans in war, and more than two years before the U.S. joined with Britain to launch the invasion of North Africa during November of 1942; while one month earlier, Montgomery, with around 1,000 tanks (of which nearly half were from the U.S. - at last), proceeded to win Britain's first large-scale land victory against Germans, in Egypt at the Battle of El Alamein.

Though I was born after WW II was over, I fought in Vietnam, and I certainly consider Churchill to be a magnificent wartime leader, deserving of tremendous praise. Max Hastings has done credit to the man and the warrior. Yes, another biography of Winston Churchill will do just fine.
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Not Max Hastings' Best Effort !!!!!

"Winston's War, Churchill, 1940-1945," written by Max Hastings, Published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 2009.

Max Hastings is one of the best military historians writing today. His book "OVERLORD" is one of the classic accounts of the Allies fighting in Europe from the Normandy invasion through the Falaise Gap in August 1944. Mr. Hastings has been able to take a mountain of factual information from his research and weave it into a seamless narrative of some historical signifiance. It worked in "OVERLORD;" it does not work here.

The problem is Winston S. Churchill. The British Prime Minister and Minister of Defense was a man of great strategic vision. His speeches and his writing after Dunkirk are widely credited with saving Great Britain in her hour of need. He saw the threat Hitler's Germany presented to his country before anyone else; and he suffered for it politically. Yet during the war Churchill's strategic vision deserted him so many times that Hastings' compliments seem forced. He wrote, "Churchill's grand vision of the war was superb." p. 360. Resumes that begin with Gallipoli and end up defending the bloody Italian mountain campaign will not win you many jobs as a strategist. Events in Churchill's life that Hastings is forced to write about often undermine the story Hastings wants to tell of the greatest ever British political leader.

One minor correction, the picture between pages 430 and 431 of Admiral William D Leahy, Alan Brooke, Hastings Ismay and George Marshall incorrectly lists U.S. Admiral Ernest King as Admiral Leahy. Note to the editors: Admiral William Leahy is authorized to wear the right shoulder "aiguillette" as an aide to President Roosevelt; Admiral King is not.

Two notes on Allied strategy. First, Churchill insisted until virtually the end of the war that the British Army in Europe be granted the highest strategic and logistic priority. Churchill's views were eagerly followed by British C.I.G.S. Alan Brooke and British 21st Army Group Commander, Field Marshal Bernard L. Montgomery. Hastings wrote, "British attempts to ignore their own impoverishment and retain a giant's role in the world inspired pity among their American friends, contempt among their American enemies." p. 419. It mattered little what most Americans thought. Only General Dwight Eisenhower's opinion really mattered and he usually sided with the British, at least until March 28, 1945. One gets a picture of General Eisenhower standing on the banks of the Rhine River in March 1945 with C.I.G.S. Alan Brooke, literally begging the British Field Marshal for a chance to "disperse" his forces, to unleash the Bradley's American Army into central Germany. Brooke agreed but it was far too little, far too late. There were only 40 odd days left in the war. In "Armageddon," Hastings wrote, "Montgomery's most serious weakness ... stemmed from a refusal to acknowledge that in north-west Europe it was now essential for the British to defer to the overwhelming dominance of the United States (Army)." p. 27. Montgomery never did force himself to accept the obvious, but that was not his job. British wartime strategy came from the top down. It came from Winston Churchill and his Chiefs of Staff and they routinely insisted on fighting the Americans tooth and nail for logistic and strategic priority for the British Army in Europe.

Second, the Italian campaign was the longest running argument between the Anglo-American Allies. The British supported it and tried to get more U.S. soldiers and ships committed to the campaign. The Americans disliked the whole Mediterranean theater and especially the campaign in Italy because of the terrible mountainous terrain. British official Harold Macmillan wrote, "The more one sees of this (Italian) peninsula, the less suited it seems for modern military operations." p. 357. This was obvious to any first year officer cadet. But it was apparently not obvious to Prime Minister Winston Churchill and his military advisors who berated the Americans time and again over operations in Italy. Two of the strongest proponents of continued operations in Italy were C.I.G.S. Alan Brooke and Mediterranean Theater Commander Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson. But we now know that they did not support operations in Italy at all and, in fact, were of the opposite view. Alan Brooke told U.S. historian Forrest Pogue, "... There is no doubt that Winston had a Balkan liking ... and he used to make matters rather difficult for me with Marshall with statements he would make, which Marshall would often think were inspired by me and they were not ... I couldn't go to him (Marshall) and say I don't agree with a word my Prime Minister is saying." C. Catherwood, Winston Churchill, p. 260. And Sir Henry Wilson said, "... I knew that strategically that was the only way (Southern France)... None of us liked the offensive against Italy really, against those mountains." C. Catherwood, p. 261. British Intelligence Officer Sir Kenneth Strong confirms Wilson's statement. "Churchill's obsession with the "underbelly" theory has always struck me as a strategic aberration. General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson ... told me early in 1944 that he also favored the American view, but said that it was difficult for him to oppose the Prime Minister's policy." Sir Kenneth Strong, Intelligence at the Top, p. 130. Allied strategy in Italy was being determined, not by the best military minds available, but by an amateur politician bent on getting his own way, as Alan Brooke once put it,'to spite the Americans.'

At conferences in Cairo and Teheran Churchill chose to fight the Overlord battle with the Americans just one more time. It was a huge mistake. Presidential advisor Harry Hopkins had warned Churchill to back off or be prepared to go it alone at Teheran. Churchill refused to listen and paid the price. Roosevelt had tired of listening to Churchill's rants. He refused numerous requests for private meetings with the British Prime Minister. Churchill liked to blame Roosevelt's casual socializing for his lack of free time, but Hastings correctly points out "... that such evasion(s) reflected policy rather than 'mischances.'" p. 348.

Churchill had overplayed the British hand throughout WW II. He got the headlines he wanted from the British press and this in turn inspired a reasonable war effort from the British people. Hastings wrote, "... the United States, its leaders and people alike still overestimated the wealth of Churchill's nation. Few grasped the extent of its moral, strategic and financial exhaustion." p. 443. In Bernard L. Montgomery, the British people had a brilliant field marshal who never lost a battle, and whose battles all went exactly as he had planned them. Financially, there was seldom the slightest hint of long-term British fiscal doom covered by the press during the war. British and Americans shared an overly optimistic future for the British Empire and the British economy. These opinions were not divined by reading the tea leaves, but by reading British newspapers.

It was all part of Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill's war winning strategy. British economic and military power were hyped and exaggerated far beyond their actual war-time performances. Neither American military or economic aid was seen as critical by the average British subject. "... Only a third of those (British) questioned held favorable views of Americans... Americans were actually held in lower esteem than Italians. Yet nine of ten Britishers thought well of Russia and the Russians." Peter Lyon, Eisenhower, p. 278.

Hastings writes, "There is an escapable pathos about Churchill's predicament in the last year of the war... His engagement with armies became ... that of a tourist, because he could no longer much influence their movements." p. 482. Yet on March 31, 1945 Churchill wrote Eisenhower a letter complaining bitterly about Eisenhower's decision to reinforce Bradley with Simpson's Ninth U.S. Army which had been attached to Montgomery's 12th British Army Group. British complaints went all the way to the Combined Chiefs in Washington which forced George Marshall to ask Eisenhower to explain his decisions. There were barely 40 days left in the war. The Americans hoped to get in at least one full-scale offensive before the war ended, if they could just get the British out of the way. The last large American offensive which had full British approval went back to Operation Cobra in the Carentan at the end of July 1944. Montgomery usually gets blamed for his intransigence with the Americans, but the real culprit was P.M. Churchill and his refusal to see a reduced role for the dying British Empire in a post-war world. Max Hastings is forced to struggle with Churchill's flawed strategic vision throughout his book. The reader keeps his fingers crossed, but he already knows the ending will not be a happy one.
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Winston's War: Churchill, 1940-1945 (Vintage) Max Hastings

This book was an eye opener for me to read. I had been led to believe that during WW II the Brits and Yanks got along very well. Little did I know that there was a strong undercurrent of dislike on both sides for their counterparts across the war planning council tables.
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A brilliant account

Probably the best account of Churchill's war leadership I've ever read. A superb blend of narrative and analysis that clearly addresses the great man's strengths and weaknesses but just as important details the military, strategic and economic constraints with which he had to wrestle. Put simply, continuing the war in 1940, or even embarking on it 1939, was one of the greatest gambles in history because the British state and its empire were simply overmatched by Germany in 1939 let alone when it was occupying most of western Europe. However, the British had some advantages and by and large Churchill was able to put them to good use. Where failures occurred it was because of the gap that existed between Churchill's overly romantic appreciation of British strength relative to the reality. But then it was this over appreciation that persuaded him to keep fighting and not come to an accomdation with Germany. Ultimately, Churchill's leadership was a considerable tour de force but then Britain's entire 200 year naval and imperial supremacy was a tour de force whose success depended on numerous factors other than the more traditional ones of land area and big battalions. Ultimately, Churchill's formula for success wasn't that different from that of the two Pitts or Lloyd George....naval supremacy and strong European or extra European allies.
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Winston Churchill As We Remember Him

Winston Churchill was larger than life--a great man perhaps the greatest political leader the world has ever known. Max Hastings, noted World War II chronicler, delves into the topic with all the determination and gusto displayed by his subject.

Churchill emerges as a much more likable human being than his counterpart in the U.S., Franklin D. Roosevelt. Although Churchill has his faults, notably his impulsiveness in military matters, his overall presence on the World War II stage ultimately supercedes them. Churchill displayed strength of will and communicated this to the world.

His was the voice the generation of the second world war always heard cajoling, pleading, defiant in the face of Nazi threats.

Churchill emerged from the war exhausted and penniless rejected by the British people. He lived to be 90, once again serving as prime minister after writing his history of World War II.

This book is a worthy addition to the many which have been written about Winston Churchill.
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Good if nothing earth-shattering

This is an interesting book, though it doesn't quite rise to the level of being necessary in terms of whether it needed to be written. It's an interesting portrait of Winston Churchill during the war years, discussing his meetings with cabinet officials and his conflicts with his own military and with FDR and Stalin, while steering clear of almost anything about his life either before or after the war. There's not even much really about Churchill being First Lord of the Admiralty at the start of the war, which you might think would be included. The author sticks pretty narrowly to his topic.

Within that, there were a few things that were omitted, I thought. There's almost nothing about his liaisons with the various military commanders other than whoever was CIGS, Dill or Brooke or whoever. Eisenhower, for instance, barely makes it into the narrative, and Montgomery is only briefly mentioned, largely for the flaps he stirred up whenever he said something obnoxious. Bill Slim makes exactly one appearance in the text of any note, while generals like Auchinlek and Wavell are only briefly mentioned at best. Instead the narrative sticks to where Hastings wants it to go, the politics of Churchill's tenure as Prime Minister, his relationship with FDR and Stalin, and a few other subjects of a similar nature.

I didn't see that there was anything particularly new in what the author wrote about Winston Churchill. Not really surprising given the volume of stuff which has been written. It's a good book, however, and certainly deserves 4 stars.
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Fills in Gaps

I thought I had reached the zenith of WWII books in the third volume of Manchester's biography of Churchill (written with Paul Reid). Perhaps I did, but Hastings's book is equally as good. First, the book is a pleasure to read, not just because it so often quotes Churchill's writings and speeches, but also because Hasting's style is often lyrical. It's always relevant and concise, but at times, he seems to have been infected with Churchill's facility to charm and inspire.

Second, I found that the book answered a question I've been tacitly asking myself since I began reading about Churchill: Why were so many people (Eisenhower, Roosevelt, for examples) impatient with him, his energy, wit, and genius being what they were? The answer is that Churchill had a tendency to overwhelm--to overload those around him; he didn't know when to stop.

Not that Hastings dislikes or unfairly criticizes his subject; indeed, the criticisms (often in war strategy) are well reasoned and seem to be justified. In Hasting's view, the criticisms are overwhelmed by Churchill's unique qualities--one man who altered the course of history.

If you're interested the Second World War, Winston's War is a must read because it fills in gaps. It's a should read in providing a detailed overview of the war's critical years.
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Good work, but not Hasting's best

I enjoyed the book, as I do all books about Churchill. And I always enjoy and appreciate Max Hastings research and writing. The result was less than expected given the subject matter and the author's considerable stature.
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Very detailed, too worshipful.

This book is very detailed with regards to Churchill's conduct during the war and does a good job illustrating the attitudes of the people and peers in England. My only objection is the praise Sir Hastings heaps on Churchill. The man was certainly great, but not flawless. In this book, he is flawless.
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