Originally posted by Mayerling
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The point to bear in mind here is that the whole point for us was to keep the Germans away from the North West coast of France and it follows secure our trade routes.
Once the Germans were pushed back and surrendered then that was job done, which is why the British military refused to go along with the idea of marching into Germany against the wishes of the Allies. We had nothing to gain from that, because the whole point was to get them out of France.
We had no desire to ruin Germany. In fact, Germany was an important trade partner for us, only not when they were in charge of the North West coast of France. Commentators here, including Keynes, instinctively felt it was a bad idea, unfair and not in our interests to burden Germany with an insurmountable problem, and this explains why re-taking the Rhineland didn't cause a ripple in this country.
Chamberlain followed in the steps of his predecessors. Fair aims such as Germans in one country and re-uniting Germany, then why should we rock a boat that had served us well; invading the non-German Czech part of Czechoslovakia and Poland then that was a different matter. The cat was out of the bag when they went into the remainder of Czechoslovakia and Britain began to prepare for war immediately. Chamberlain's policy was a typically English pragmatic and reasonable policy.
Churchill, widely regarded as the man who turned the country against Appeasement, did no such thing. Britain knew war was coming in 1938 and began to prepare, long before Churchill took office. And, there was no such policy of 'Appeasement'. The majority of Englishman agreed with the Germans on a point of principle that it was their country and their people. As soon as they strayed from this, British policy changed.
As for the United States at Versailles. Obviously Wilson was a liberal and truly believed in the principles of a just peace and self-determination. The problem was that the United States had invested a lot of money into this war and they wanted it back. Most of it was loaned to Britain who passed it on to France and Italy to keep the war effort going. The French and Italians had none to give back, we had some but nowhere near enough. And, so the Americans did an about turn in 1919 and decided they must make Germany pay in order to get their money back.
The War Guilt Clause was not envisaged until the Americans realised the only chance they had to get their money back was from Germany, and in order to do that and make them pay reparations they needed to have the War Guilt Clause inserted into the treaty. The German delegation who walked up the steps in June 1919 had no idea how severe the treaty was going to be, because the Allies stance hardened between the end of the war and this date.
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