Alternative to Appeasement: Sir Robert Vansittart and Alliance Diplomacy, 1934-1937
By (Author) Michael Roi
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1997
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
Central / national / federal government policies
European history
Asian history
940.52
Hardback
216
The years from 1934 to 1937 were a time during which the British Empire was confronted with the emergence of the triple threat of Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan and Fascist Italy. The goal of British policy was easily defined: the protection and promotion of Britain's vast interests. While Neville Chamberlain and Sir Robert Vansittart agreed on the goal, they disagreed on the means to achieve it. Their disagreement stemmed partly from their different understandings of the nature of the Third Reich; Vansittart understood better than Chamberlain the implications of Hitler's "Weltanschauung". But their different strategies also reflected the fact that Chamberlain did not share Vansittart's belief in the necessity of pursuing alliance diplomacy to protect the world-wide security and interests of the British empire. While the prime minister realized that Britain's problems were global in scope, he thought Britain could solve each problem on a bilateral basis. In other words, Britain should approach Germany, Japan and Italy directly to settle outstanding disputes. Vansittart did not believe, however, that Britain's problems could be solved on a bilateral basis, for the interdependence of events in every region of the globe militated against bilateral solutions.
[T]his is a valuable addition to the ever-growing body of literature on British foreign policy during the 1930's. Roi convincingly demonstrates that Vansittart's perspective was a global rather than Eurocentric one and that his Germanophobia has perhaps been overplayed in the past.-Albion
Ros's book is a timely challenge to the work of others diplomatic historians who would try to seal the 1930s is a historiographical crypt and proceed with haste to the newly opened vaults of the early Cold War.-Diplomacy & Statecraft
"This is a valuable addition to the ever-growing body of literature on British foreign policy during the 1930's. Roi convincingly demonstrates that Vansittart's perspective was a global rather than Eurocentric one and that his Germanophobia has perhaps been overplayed in the past."-Albion
"Ros's book is a timely challenge to the work of others diplomatic historians who would try to seal the 1930s is a historiographical crypt and proceed with haste to the newly opened vaults of the early Cold War."-Diplomacy & Statecraft
"[T]his is a valuable addition to the ever-growing body of literature on British foreign policy during the 1930's. Roi convincingly demonstrates that Vansittart's perspective was a global rather than Eurocentric one and that his Germanophobia has perhaps been overplayed in the past."-Albion
MICHAEL L. ROI is a Sessional Lecturer at the University of Toronto at Mississauga. /e