Analysis of Sir David Manning’s interview in New Statesman
October 10, 2007
The view from 2002
October 5, 2007
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1913522.stm
A very well written piece discussing the Anglo-American relationship just seven months after 9/11. In fact, this is a very good history piece, analysing much of the key events in the post-1945 relationship. I post it, then, to provide some background information generally, and also as an historical document. Reading ‘old news’ is laughably easy now and this is of huge benefit to the historian. Note particularly where Ben Wright says ‘British and American marines are currently fighting the remaining al-Qaeda and Taleban fighters in Afghanistan’. They are, of course, still there and still fighting.
John Charmley on Churchill and the ‘Special Relationship’
October 4, 2007
John Charmley is a professor of modern history at the University of East Anglia and a controversial figure noted for his revisionist work on Winston Churchill. There is a good wikipedia entry for Charmley here.
His book Churchill’s Grand Alliance: The Anglo-American Special Relationship 1940-57 is brave in attempting to ‘clear away the lush undergrowth laid down by Churchill and his admirers’ (p. xiii). This undergrowth is both dense and misleading. One of its chief cultivators is Andrew Roberts, who is quoted on the dust jacket as saying about one of Charmley’s earlier works Churchill: The End of Glory: ‘For those who love Churchill partly because of his warts and feel that they have waited too long to hear the case for the prosecution put eloquently and with impeccable intellectual soundness, “it is a delight”‘. Roberts’ use of the word ‘warts’ is surely a deliberate echo of the supposed Cromwellian request to the artist Peter Lely to paint him ‘warts and all’ in his portrait. That aside, Charmley has a great deal to say about the A-A relationship, in his opening sentence he writes:
‘In the beginning was the word, and the word was Churchill’s, and he pronounced it good’.
He continues in a somewhat curmudgeonly way to say that ‘[t]he Anglo-American special relationship has been such a marked feature of the last fifty years that a generation which has the attention span of a television commercial is apt to regard it with awe as an ancient phenomenon. Yet in very large measure it was a artefact created by one of the greatest literary and political artists of the century, Winston Churchill.’ (p. 3).
It is indeed only in taking the long view that we can see the present state of friendship as something of a abberation. For a good hundred and fifty years after the War of Independence (1775-1783) the two powers seemed to be set for permanent conflict. Border disputes – relating primarily to Canada, maritime rights, and bitter memories of the war (both personal and national) were some of the factors that conspired to keep the countries apart. Churchill’s influence is most strong during World War Two and during his second premiership 1951-55, and there are many other reasons for the developing friendship of the late 19th century and early 20th. We can, however, look to him as one of the principal architects of both the actual and rhetorical relationship which has so often been given the tag ’special’ in the post war period.
Matt Frei on George W Bush’s evolving foreign policy
October 4, 2007
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7027166.stm
Great comment article. Frei, a BBC journalist and broadcaster for around twenty years, provides excellent insights into the Washington political scene. ‘In the cooler with the Brits’, is his assessment of the Bush administration’s current attitude to the UK.
Recommended books on Anglo-American relations
October 4, 2007
- J. Baylis (ed.), Anglo-American Relations since 1939: the Enduring Alliance (1997)
- Kathleen Burk, Old World, New World: Anglo-American Relations from the Beginning, (forthcoming Winter 2007)
- Alan Dobson, Anglo-American Relations in the Twentieth Century (1995)
- Ritchie Ovendale, Anglo-American Relations in the Twentieth Century (1998)
- David Reynolds and David Dimbleby, An Ocean Apart: the Relationship between Britain and America in the Twentieth Century (1988)