ID | 132411 |
Title Proper | Conservative leaders, coalition, and Britain's decision for war in 1914 |
Language | ENG |
Author | Young, John W |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Conservative leaders may have had a decisive impact on the decision by the Liberal government to enter the Great War in August 1914. In a seminal article of 1975, Keith Wilson argued that their readiness to fight "cut the ground … from beneath the feet of the non-interventionists" in the Cabinet. Those ministers who had hitherto opposed war now recognised that continued divisions could bring the government's collapse, in which case the Unionists, probably in a coalition with pro-war Liberals, would take office and enter the conflict anyway. Since Wilson's essay, important light has focussed on Unionist thinking by works that look at the July Crisis as part of a longer party history. This analysis provides a detailed investigation of the actions of Unionist leaders in the days immediately leading to war. It resolves some of the main contradictions in the primary evidence, argues that the possibility of a coalition was very real and demonstrates that one key player-the first lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill-subsequently tried, with some success, to disguise his activities. |
`In' analytical Note | Diplomacy and Statecraft Vol.25, No.2; June 2014: p.214-239 |
Journal Source | Diplomacy and Statecraft Vol.25, No.2; June 2014: p.214-239 |
Key Words | Unionist Leaders ; Winston Churchill ; United Kingdom - UK ; Conservative Leaders ; Political Coalition ; Keith Wilson ; Hitherto Opposed ; War ; Warfare History ; Liberal Government ; Great War ; World War - I ; Unionist Thinking ; Warfare Crisis ; Warfare Conflicts |