AppeasementAn analysis of the Strategic policy of Appeasement and its application under
Neville Chamberlain in the years preceding the Second World War(Rough Copy)
Tim Norman
Assignment 1HIST 4200
Dr. Annie St. John-StarkAugust 2nd, 2012
The conclusion of the Great War brought with it the true realization of the horrors of modern
warfare. What many had predicted would be a short conflict resulted in a protracted bloodbath spanning
over 4 years. Some nine million individuals died before an armistice was signed by Germany on
November 11th, 1918. The signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 would stimulate the British
diplomatic policy of appeasement and set the stage for grievances upon which the Nazi party would find
much of its support after 1933. In 1937, British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, would inherit
perhaps the most difficult task in diplomacy and foreign relations faced by any of his predecessors. The
most notorious of ‘the appeasers,’ he has frequently shouldered the blame and criticism for maintaining a
weak and failed policy that allowed the Third Reich to establish itself as the supreme military power in
Europe. In spite of this, a closer inspection brings to light a number of more complex nuances to the
Prime Ministers use appeasement as a diplomatic tool during the years leading up to the World War II.
The following essay will examine the policy of appeasement itself, discerning the various reasons it was a
popular diplomatic policy in the pre-war period. This will include the intricacies of party politics,
economics, foreign relations, and ‘balance of power’ as they pertain to the aforementioned subject.
Finally, the debate surrounding Chamberlain and his use of appeasement will be addressed. This paper
will argue that appeasement was a diplomatic policy in which the Prime Minister and (many) of his
advisors had great confidence. It was a deliberately adopted tactic used by skilled politicians and
diplomats in a desperate struggle to prevent a second European war in the face of rising nationalism and
hostile, expansionist dictators.
The policy of appeasement is most often examined by historians in the context of the British
experience in the First World War and the signing of the Versailles treaty at the end of the six month
Paris Peace Conference. In spite of this, the roots of appeasement have been traced by a number of
scholars to the mid-nineteenth century Britain. Martin Gilbert distinguishes a “. . . state of mind
conducive to appeasement developing from the time of Crimean War”1
In his work, The Roots of Appeasement, he cites changes in British thinking towards the morality
of war and its acceptance as a tool of international policy. Citing The Roots of Appeasement, Gilbert
declares “The age when war was romantic, when alliances were skillfully manipulated for sudden
gain . . . was dying.”2 In place of this romantic patriotism, the idea of a ‘give and take’ approach is
facilitated, one in which disputes were to be settled in a rational, non-violent manner.
Between 1871 and 1914, Europe remained relatively free of large wars of conquest and
domination. This period of peace can be traced back to Otto von Bismarck who unified the states of the
North German Confederation into the German Empire in 1871. Under the German Empire, Bismarck was
able to establish an alliance system that brought with it balance of power and “. . . a sense of general
security. . .”3 to the continent. This is not to say that the years prior to 1914 were free of tension and
internal desires to solve conflicts through war. Rather, there remained an almost surreal aura of
confidence in the power of diplomacy that lasted until the outbreak of World War I in August of 1914.
The First World War brought a number of previous assumptions under scrutiny. British domestic
politics was changed fundamentally as previous expectations of ‘short wars’ were swiftly discarded. Two
important developments could be directly observed in Britain as a result of the conflict:
“’Total War’ now required the mobilization of all the energies and resources of the nation. Such was the nature of mass participation that commentators found it increasingly difficult to conceive of a successful war ever being fought by a state of whose population a substantial proportion was in some way or other disaffected. Secondly, the war played havoc with the British party system.”4
British participation in the war was debated in the years that followed. Although there was a
general movement of support 1914; this attitude had changed considerably by the 1920s. The pressures
and demands of war resulted in the Labour and the Conservative parties falling into favour, while support
for the Liberal party fell into decline. The primary task on the post-war agenda was to ensure that the
outbreak of future protracted conflicts would be averted. A number of moves were made in this direction.
The idea of collective security was established under the League of Nations. Under this agreement “. . .
all states would agree that in the case of aggression against any member of the system, all other states
would respond to defend the attacked state.”5 This would be backed-up by the Washington Navy Treaty
and Kellogg–Pact, effectively strengthening arms control over the great powers and making war illegal
respectively. In spite of these developments, the conditions set out in the Treaty of Versailles combined
with the rise of Adolf Hitler and the National Socialist Party would test the policy of appeasement to its
limits.
“It is a severe treaty in the duties and penalties it imposes upon Germany, but it is severe only because great wrongs done by Germany are to be righted and repaired . . .”6
The Treaty of Versailles forced Germany to acknowledge its responsibility for starting the
conflict. It also required the country to disarm, make territorial concessions, and pay an immense sum in
reparations to allied powers. Although there was a general consensus that action needed to be taken to
prevent further German aggression, those conditions set out in Versailles were considered by many as too
severe. Severe enough, in fact, that they could act as a catalyst to conflict in the future. Warnings of this
nature had been predicted by individuals such as economist John Maynard Keynes who criticized the
treaty upon its inception.
“The future life of Europe was not their concern; its means of livelihood was not their anxiety. Their preoccupations, good and bad alike, related to frontiers and nationalities, to the balance of power, to imperial aggrandizements, to the future enfeeblement of a strong and dangerous enemy, to revenge, and to the shifting by the victors of their unbearable financial burdens on to the shoulders of the defeated.”7
British objectives in utilizing the policy of appeasement with Germany ultimately failed in
preventing Adolf Hitler from becoming Chancellor. The Lausanne conference of 1931, initially viewed
as a triumph in conciliation, had eliminated Germany’s obligation to paying war reparations. Yet it had
little effect in changing the economic and political instability that engulfed the country. As a result, Hitler
became the German chancellor in January of 1933, assuming dictatorial powers under the Enabling Act
two months later. His party would utilize the grievances of Versailles in an attempt to increase domestic
support and gain the sympathy of foreign nations.
Hitler promptly left the League of Nations on 18 October 1933. It was obvious to many officials
in the British government that the new German Chancellor was an extremist, one whom could easily
plunge the continent back into a terrible conflict. The next two years passed with little change in foreign
policy as the British felt dismayed and convinced it would be “. . . impossible to do business with Hitler.”8
These concerns seemed to materialize in March of 1935 when Hitler chose to break Versailles and
announced the rearmament of Germany. Neville Chamberlain was angered, in writing to his sister,
referred to Hitler as “. . . the bully of Europe . . .”9 and held the conviction that only “. . . firmness and
clarity would make Germany behave reasonably.”10 However, the efforts of Chamberlain and Baldwin in
1935 fell far short of what could be considered a success. Chamberlain had become convinced that the
rearmament of Great Britain – specifically the RAF – were essential to the security of the island nation.
Starting in 1935, an ever growing percentage of Britain’s GDP was devoted to military expenditures.
Between 1935 and 1937, economic appeasement was thought to be the most constructive
approach to the growing anxiety with Germany. Anglo-German co-operation was forwarded by Frank
Ashton-Gwatkin, a deal including a mutual reduction on import quotas and tariffs between counties.
Additional economic proposals involved the creation of an Anglo-German economic bloc or even “. . . the
inclusion of Germany in a full-blown, European-wide common market.”11 It was hoped that such
economic arrangements would ease political tensions between the two powers and possibly preserve
peace on the European continent. Unfortunately, attempts at economic appeasement would fall on deaf
ears. In spite of this failure, the economic appeasement remained on the table as an option in future
negotiation.
Further anxiety would follow with German seizure and remilitarization of the Rhineland in 1936.
The Locarno Accords had asserted that the western powers would assist in any aggression towards France
or Belgium. German occupation of this zone was viewed as the possible prelude to an attack. In spite of
this, military retaliation was not considered and sanctions proposed by France were likewise brushed
aside. Surprisingly, British public opinion remained somewhat sympathetic to the Germans. This is not
to imply that they were overly sympathetic to dictators or completely oblivious to the ongoing situation.
Rather, many believed Germany’s grievances were reasonable and negotiation should be pursued further,
effectively restoring the German state to its previous status in Europe and enhancing continental stability
accordingly. These feelings were not felt by all, Neville Chamberlain being one of those individuals who
opposed a passive approach. Upon becoming British Prime Minister in 1937 he decided to “. . . move
from Baldwin’s passive appeasement policy to more active attempts to produce a European settlement.”12
Due to Great Britain’s growing isolation and independence from its colonies and fears of another
European conflict, it was determined that a different strategy was required in dealing with developing
problems concerning Germany.
Neville Chamberlain had been appointed Chancellor in 1931 under Prime Minister Ramsey
MacDonald. At the time, the national government was suffering from a severe financial crisis.
Chamberlain experienced great success as an economist during these disparate years, effectively resolving
many of Great Britain’s financial calamities. His achievements and reputation within the Conservative
party eventually brought him to succeed Stanley Baldwin as Prime Minister in 1937. Having some
previous experience in foreign relations, Chamberlain would make the maintenance of peace in Europe
one of his top priorities. He would work together with his Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Anthony
Eden, in the establishment of “. . . sustainable rearmament and the search for German assent to arms
limitation and a European settlement . . .”13 Although Germany remained the focal point, the problems
faced by the administration were not singular. The administration was well aware of the aggressive
foreign policy being pursued by both Italy and Japan and the potential threat posed by these two powers.
Additionally, the actions of the United States could affect British relations with all three.
From taking office, Neville Chamberlain had already formulated the methods in which he would
go about conducting foreign relations. He firmly believed in personal, face-to-face negotiations rather
than working through diplomats. Yet, it would not be until 1938 that the British Prime Minister would
actually meet with Hitler in this fashion. In the interim, it would be Lord Halifax that would be the first
to meet the German Chancellor. During their first meeting in 1937, Halifax “. . . told the Nazi leader that
British policy was not opposed to the ‘peaceful evolution’ of outstanding German grievances over
Danzig, Austria and Czechoslovakia provided they were achieved by methods which did not ‘cause far
reaching disturbances.”14 Alexander Eden, British foreign secretary, claimed to have reservations
regarding Chamberlains policy of appeasement. However, he never voiced his criticism prior to February
of 1938. To the contrary, during the month of January, Eden stated to Chamberlain “. . . I do hope that
you will never for an instant feel that any interest you take in foreign affairs, however close, could ever be
resented by me.”15 Unfortunately, early reassurances would give way to tension soon thereafter, as
friction between Eden and Chamberlain intensified as Germany began her aggressive intimidation of Kurt
Schuschnigg, the Austrian Chancellor. Chamberlain continued to pursue his policy of peaceful settlement
in dealing with the question of Austria. Anthony Eden resigned on 20 February 1938. The foreign
minister had become tired of attempting a negotiated agreement with Mussolini and Hitler, both of whom
and he firmly believed to be unappeasable. Lord Halifax moved in to take Eden’s position just prior to
the crisis in Czechoslovakia.
The German Chancellor would annex Austria on 12 March 1938 without a shot fired. Filled with
confidence, Hitler soon had his eyes set on the Sudetenland. This part of Czechoslovakia was inhabited
by large numbers of ethnic Germans and geographically constituted a large portion of the border regions
of the country. In light of these developments, Chamberlain had his first meeting with Adolf Hitler on 15
September 1938 to begin negotiations over the Sudetenland. Hitler demanded that all areas occupying a
German speaking majority should surrender their sovereignty to Germany. This plan was accepted by
both the British and the French, while the Anglo-French plan was effectively forced onto the reluctant
Czechs.
What was considered a success would lead to further disappointment; Chamberlain was faced
with additional demands from Hitler upon returning to Germany on 22 September 1938. The Godesberg
memorandum pushed the crisis into another diplomatic deadlock. Retaining his composure, Chamberlain
issued the following statement urging calmness in the prevailing state of anxiety: “. . . the first essential in
the opinion of the Prime Minister is that there should be determination on the part of all parties concerned
to insure that local conditions in Czechoslovakia are such as not in any way to interfere with the progress
of the conversations.”16 This is rather extraordinary considering the awesome and menacing German
military presence on the Czech border. As reported in The Pittsburg Press:
“News reached the British delegation that Bermany had 22 army divisions–about 500,000 men, it was estimated, if they were on war footing–in the immediate neighborhood of the Czech frontier on all sides. Fighting between Sudeten Germans and Czechs was reported along the border. From France came news that heavy French troop movements were in progress along the German frontier.”17
The Prime Minister decided to send Sir Horace Wilson to Germany and propose conference
between the major powers so as to come to a negotiated settlement. At the time, tensions between cabinet
and Chamberlain were growing in intensity with the prospect of a German offensive into Czechoslovakia
now almost a certainty. Cabinet strongly felt that any Czech resistance to the occupation of the
Sudetenland should entail military intervention by both France and Britain. In spite of the rather
inflexible stance held by congress, the Prime Minister was intent on keeping negotiations open.
Chamberlain was successful in convincing congress that Wilson’s mission was unique in that it made
Hitler a completely new offer using the platform of an international conference. This would set the stage
for the Munich conference on 29 September 1938. In retrospect, the strategy of appeasement in dealing
with Hitler appears to be absurd. As Hitler wrote Chamberlain offering more promises prior to the
conference, the British leaders’ confidence in success looks rather naive on the surface. In his reply to
Hitler’s letter, he answers “After reading your letter I feel certain that you can get all essentials without
war and without delay . . . I feel convinced that we could reach agreement in a week”18 Although an
observation such as this can be made in hindsight, the complexity and anxiety of the situation which
Chamberlain faced during this period must be thoughtfully considered.
The Munich agreement, signed 30 September 1938, was hailed as a success by Neville
Chamberlain and much of Britain. Although the use of appeasement permitted the German occupation of
the Sudetenland, it was seen as a declaration that would prevent the two countries from ever going to war
again. On returning to Britain, Chamberlain read the agreement enthusiastically to reporters:
"We, the German Führer and Chancellor, and the British Prime Minister, have had a further meeting today and are agreed in recognizing that the question of Anglo-German relations is of the first importance for two countries and for Europe. We regard the agreement signed last night and the Anglo-German Naval Agreement as symbolic of the desire of our two peoples never to go to war with one another again."19
Optimism in England was to be short-lived; Hitler would continue to aggravate the situation in
Europe with impunity after Munich. The Chancellor spoke in an aggressive and degrading tone towards
the British leadership and members of parliament with the German press following suit. Czechoslovakia
was facing the threat of further military attack by the German military while Poland and Hungary grabbed
portions of Czech territory. On the night of 9-10 November 1938, the Jewish population was ruthlessly
attacked in what is now known as Kristallnacht, or ‘night of broken glass.’ Richard Thurlow in Fascism
in Britain: from Oswald Mosely’s Blackshirts to the National Front, provides another possible
contributing factor to Chamberlain’s failure to act earlier and more forcefully to mounting German
aggression. Large numbers of British citizens actually supported Nazi persecution of the Jewish
population and the ideology of fascism. Nesta Webster, a well-known feminist author and early member
of the British Union of Fascists (BUF) had “. . . since 1933 had been praising Hitler”20 as his “. . . anti-
Semitism had cleared out all pornographic literature in Germany.”21 Webster later renounced her views,
believing the Furor had “. . . sold his soul to the devil,”22 a response that was likely due to Hitler’s pact
with Bolshevism and increasing fears of German aggression. Likewise, Lord Londonderry had sent a
letter to German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop in 1936, stating ". . . I have no great affections
for the Jews. It is possible to trace their participation in most of these International disturbances which
have created so much havoc in different countries."23
The world stood shocked and horrified upon hearing of the brutality of Kristallnacht, and support
for fascism and anti-Semitism gradually began to decline. The Furors continued provocations effectively
ended the policy of appeasement with Germany. Prime Minister Chamberlain – perhaps naively –
proposed continued Anglo-German economic co-operation and remained confident in holding a
disarmament conference in the latter half of 1939. Some of the final efforts in economic appeasement
were carried out by city commodity broker, E. W. Tennant and German Foreign Minister, Joachim von
Ribbentrop. A separate exchange took place between British industrialists and Herman Goering just prior
to the war. According to scholar Scott Newton, these moves were warranted. In Profits of Peace,
Newton declares “. . . the fact that Anglo-German agreement was never going to be possible should not
lead us to underestimate the urgency and intensity of attempts . . . during the critical weeks of July and
August. A world was at stake. How could it be preserved once war had broken out?”24 This flurry of
activity just before the outbreak of war suggests the lengths to which the British wanted to maintain
European peace. Unfortunately, it was becoming rather evident that Adolf Hitler’s demands and
aggressive behaviour could not be appeased by any means short of absolute capitulation. France, Britain
and the majority of countries in the Commonwealth declared war on Germany when it invaded Poland on
1 September 1939.
“There was never a war in all history easier to prevent by timely action than the one which has just desolated great areas of the globe. It could have been prevented without the firing of a single shot, but no one would listen.”25 – Winston Churchill, 1946
Critical opinions of appeasement – such as that posed by Winston Churchill in the quote above –
were quite popular in scholarly literature in the decades following the Second World War. Then again, to
look back and pass judgment whilst choosing to ignore certain facts was all too common in early
historical scholarship and writing on appeasement. “History will judge us kindly,” Churchill remarked at
the Tehran Conference in 1943; when asked how he could be sure, he responded: “because I shall write
the history.” As it is often the victor that does write the history, it is the duty of the academic historian to
record past events as accurately as possible for the benefit of future generations. Although the majority of
scholarly literature points towards Neville Chamberlain as a man who did use appeasement as a military
strategy; it is not stated as his “sole” strategy prior to WWII. According to James Levy, appeasement
was used parallel with a policy of rapid re-armament in the late 1930s. In realizing that the German
Chancellor could not be appeased, Levy theorizes that the Prime Minister skillfully bought time for the
allies. He thoughtfully writes “. . . Appeasement did not stop the war, but it did not cause the war
either.”26 Levy goes on to write that “. . . rearmament was . . . a duel policy to deter war first and to create
the means to fight a war only secondarily.”27 It was hoped that “. . . the stronger Britain grew militarily,
the more effective her diplomacy would be.”28 Other scholarly works, such as Jeffery Record’s article
Appeasement Reconsidered: Investigating the Mythology of the 1930s argue that “Anglo-French
appeasement of Hitler in the 1930s has generated a mythology that ignores much of the actual political-
military situation at the time . . .” Record goes on to list a myriad of considerations that are often “glossed
over” by those that study the strategy as applied in the 1930s. These included “. . . France’s military
inflexibility, Britain’s strategic overstretch, France’s strategic dependence on Britain, dread of strategic
bombing and misjudgment of the Nazi air threat, American isolationism, and distrust of the Soviet Union
and fear of Communism,”29 to name but a few. Included in this article are some interesting contemporary
observations that many historians have overlooked. To this day, Hitler remains without equal as a state
threat. Record states that “Hitler’s nihilism, ambitions, and military power posed a mortal threat to
Western civilization.”30 Comparisons are drawn to Stalin, Mao Zedong, Ho Chi Minh, and Saddam
Hussein. None of the scenarios posed by these men match Hitler, as one is left to ponder “. . . who but
Hitler was so powerful and unappeasable and undeterrable?”31 The author also reminds us to beware of
hindsight, as “Today’s should runs afoul of yesterday’s could not and would not . . . British and French
statesmen did not know they were on the road to general war; on the contrary, they were seeking to avoid
it.”32 Furthermore, “. . . neither assassination of the head of a major state nor the launching of preventive
war against the (German) state fell within the repertory of practical and politically acceptable policy
options.”33
The burden that Neville Chamberlain inherited upon assuming the position of British Prime
Minister in 1937 was colossal. Although appeasement had been used as an effective diplomatic and
strategic tool since the mid-19th century, it was a tool which failed in dealing with Adolf Hitler. Despite
making every effort imaginable, Chamberlain and his advisors could not successfully appease the German
dictator. Regardless, appeasement remained Chamberlain’s diplomatic policy of choice, a policy which
he firmly believed was the best strategy given the circumstances. He used it deliberately and confidently,
in the face of heavy criticism. Tis choice was not without its consequences; the Prime Minister lost close
political allies (such as foreign secretary Antony Eden), faced increasing economic pressures (much of
which could be attributed to rapid re-armament), and the jeering of the more “hawkish” members of
parliament who wanted war. Contrary to the historical writings of numerous commentators, appeasement
should not be blamed for the outbreak of war. I believe that James Levy said it best, stating that “. . .
appeasement did not stop the war, but it did not cause the war either.”34 The failure of Munich and the
outbreak of war in 1939 were not a byproduct of the personal of political weakness of Neville
Chamberlain. Rather, in hindsight, it was clearly impossible dealing with a character such as Adolf
Hitler. One could not appease the unappeasable.
Endnotes
1 Martin Gilbert, The Roots of Appeasement (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson Inc., 1966), 4ff.2 Gilbert, Roots of Appeasement, 5.3 William R. Rock, British Appeasement in the 1930’s (New York: W. W. Norton & Company Inc., 1977), 32.4 Keith Robbins, Appeasement, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers Inc., 1997), 9-10.5 Allen Sens and Peter Stoett, Global Politics: Origins, Currents, Directions, 4th ed. (Toronto: Nelson Education Ltd., 2010), 13.6 “Germans Sign the Treaty and Officially End War on Saturday June 28th,” Florence Times Daily, 4 July 1919, 5.
<http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2yYsAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RJ8FAAAAIBAJ&pg=1841,1799630&dq=signing+treaty+of+versailles&hl=en>.
7 John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of Peace, (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920), 77.8 Rock, British Appeasement, 36.9 R.A.C. Parker, Chamberlain and Appeasement (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993), 26.10 Parker, Chamberlain and Appeasement, 26.11 Rock, British Appeasement, 38.12 Richard C. Thurlow, Fascism in Britain: from Oswald Mosely’s Blackshirts to the National Front, (New York: I.B. Tauris & Co Ltd., 2006), 9313 Parker, Chamberlain and Appeasement, 54.14 Frank McDonough, Neville Chamberlain, appeasement and the British road to war, (New York: St. Martin’s Press Inc., 1998), 51.15 McDonough, Neville Chamberlain, 52.16 Webb Miller, “Chamberlain-Hitler: British Demand Pledge That Nazi Army Stay Out of Czechoslovakia During
Meeting,” The Pittsburgh Press, 23 September 1938, 13, <http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=o0kqAAAAIBAJ&sjid=N0wEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3902,3947539&dq=c hamberlain&hl=en>.17 Miller, “Chamberlain-Hitler,” 13.18 Neville Chamberlain, In Search of Peace (New York: Van Rees Press, 1939), 197.19 “Chamberlain Secures Peace in Our Time,” The History Channel website, 1:08, filmed on September 30, 1938,
<http://www.history.com/audio/chamberlain-secures-peace-in-our-time> (accessed Mar 10, 2012).20 Thurlow, Fascism in Britain, 137.21 Ibid., 137.22 Ibid., 138.23 Robert Rhodes James, The British Revolution: British Politics 1880-1939, vol. 2, (London: Hamish Hamilton Ltd., 1978), 526-527.24 Scott Newton, Profits of Peace: The Political Economy of Anglo-German Appeasement, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 129.25 John L. Snell, ed., The Outbreak of the Second World War: Design or Blunder? (London: D. C. Heath, 1962), vii.26 James P. Levy, Appeasement And Rearmament: Britain, 1936-1939, (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Inc., 2006), 158.27 Ibid., 161.28 Ibid.29 Jeffery Record, Appeasement Reconsidered: Investigating the Mythology of the 1930s, Strategic Studies
Institute United States Army War College, August 01, 2005, v.http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pubs/display.cfm?pubID=622
30 Ibid., 4431 Ibid.32 Ibid., 4533 Ibid.34 Levy, Appeasement and Rearmament: Britain, 1936-1939, 158
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