Europe, the Mother Continent of Western Man, is today aging and dying, unable to sustain the birth rates needed to keep her alive, or to resist
conquest by an immigrant invasion from the Third World.
What happened to the nations that only a century ago ruled the world?
In "Churchill, Hitler and 'The
Unnecessary War': How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World," published today, this writer will argue that it was colossal blunders
of British statesmen, Winston Churchill foremost among them, that turned two European wars into world wars that may yet prove the mortal wounds of the
West.
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Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary
War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World
Were World Wars I and
II inevitable? Were the bloodiest and most devastating conflicts ever suffered by mankind fated by forces beyond men's control? Or were they products
of calamitous failures of judgment?
In this monumental and provocative history, Patrick Buchanan makes the case that, if not for the blunders
of British statesmen -- Winston Churchill first among them -- the horrors of two world wars and the Holocaust might have been avoided.
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The first blunder was a secret decision of the inner Cabinet in 1906 to send a British army across the Channel to fight in any Franco-German War.
Had the Kaiser known the British Empire would fight for France, he would have moved more decisively than he did to halt the plunge to war in July
1914.
Had Britain not declared war on Aug. 4 and brought in Japan, Italy and the United States, the war would have ended far sooner. Leninism and
Stalinism would never have triumphed in Russia, and Hitler would never have come to power in Germany.
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