Churchill : A Life (9780795337260) by Gilbert Martin
Author:Gilbert, Martin [Gilbert, Martin]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9780795337260
Publisher: Epubdirect
Published: 2014-09-15T05:00:00+00:00
24
The Moment of Truth
Throughout the autumn of 1934 Churchill had been preparing a major Parliamentary appeal for accelerated Air Force expansion. On November 25, three days before the debate, Desmond Morton sent him a three-page analysis of German air plans, facts which were equally available to the Government, for whose Intelligence service Morton worked. Churchill sent Baldwin a précis of what he intended to say during the debate, during which he intended to move an amendment critical of the Governmentâs air rearmament plans. It appeared, Churchill wrote to Lloyd George on November 24, that his amendment âhas caused much disturbance in Government circles. The facts set out in the précis cannot I think be controverted and the Cabinet have woken up to the fact that they are âcaught shortâ in this very grave matter.â
Ministers were indeed uneasy; on November 25 Hoare told the Cabinet that it was âmost important to show the world that the Government had just as much as, and more information than Mr Churchillâ. At Hoareâs suggestion it was agreed that Baldwin should accuse Churchill of exaggeration. But at a further Cabinet meeting on November 26 the Air Staff urged that, in order to meet German expansion plans, the new British air programme should be accelerated, so that all the aeroplanes involved in the existing British scheme would be completed by the end of 1936, instead of 1939.
Churchillâs speech of November 28 marked a climax in his campaign for a more active Government policy towards air defence. âTo urge preparation of defence,â he began, âis not to assert the imminence of war. On the contrary, if war was imminent preparations for defence would be too late.â War was neither imminent nor inevitable, but unless Britain took immediate steps to make herself secure âit will soon be beyond our power to do soâ. In violation of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was building up a powerful, well-equipped army, âthough little is said about it in publicâ, with factory production geared increasingly to war material. German air rearmament posed the greatest danger. âHowever calmly surveyed, the danger of an attack from the air must appear most formidable.â
He did not wish to exaggerate, Churchill said, or to accept âthe sweeping claimsâ being put forward by alarmists. Nevertheless, he believed, in a week or ten daysâ intensive bombing of London one could hardly expect âthat less than 30,000 or 40,000 people would be killed or maimedâ, and with the use of incendiary bombs the situation could be even worse.1 As a result of âsuch a dreadful act of power and terrorâ, in which bombs could go through a series of floors âigniting each one simultaneouslyâ, as he had been assured âby persons who are acquainted with the scienceâ, grave panic would affect the civilian population, three or four million of whom would be âdriven out into the open countryâ.
Churchill warned that it was not London alone that would be at risk from aerial bombardment; Birmingham, Sheffield and âthe great manufacturing townsâ would likewise be the targets of bombing raids in the event of war.
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