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The Appeasers ([Rev. ed.])

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The pre-war administration of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, ignoring the advice of seasoned diplomats and seasoned politicians alike, pursued a policy of appeasement in the mistaken belief that it would cause Adolf Hitler to cease his belligerent plans.

Instead, it showed Hitler that the British government were willing to come to terms with him at the expense of other, smaller, nations. Martin Gilbert and Richard Gott, two young Oxford historians when they wrote this book in 1963, produced this compelling account of how a whole important branch of foreign policy was developed, how it was carried out, and why it was misconceived.

They reveal what the appeasers sought, and the methods they were prepared to use to achieve their ends.

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Product Details
1842120506 / 9781842120507
Paperback
01/06/2000
United Kingdom
English
xviii, 444p.
22 cm
general /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Previous ed.: London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1963.
'Here is a remarkable book, admirably documented and most fairly presented.' Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart, Glasgow Herald '... an extraordinary compilation of detailed facts'. Michael Foot He is the author of the bestselling The Holocaust, and is the best-known writer on the Second World War First UK paperback edition
'Here is a remarkable book, admirably documented and most fairly presented.' Sir Robert Bruce Lockhart, Glasgow Herald '... an extraordinary compilation of detailed facts'. Michael Foot He is the author of the bestselling The Holocaust, and is the best-known writer on the Second World War First UK paperback edition 1DBK United Kingdom, Great Britain, HBG General & world history, HBJD1 British & Irish history, HBLW 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000, JPQB Central government policies, JPSD Diplomacy