In the Mediterranean, Harold Macmillan wrote: â
I am much distressed
to see a worsening of AngloâAmerican relations generally since Eisenhower left and I am also not very hopeful of getting any new idea into the PM's mind at present.' There was much debate and many changes of heart about
Anvil
, a prospective landing in the south of France originally scheduled to coincide with the descent on Normandy. The British, having favoured the scheme, now turned sour because of its inevitable impact on Allied strength in Italy. On 21 March Maitland-Wilson signalled, recommending
Anvil
's cancellation. After protracted exchanges with Washington, most about landing craft, it was agreed to postpone the operation. Churchill became increasingly sceptical, and finally absolutely hostile. He favoured diversionary landings by commandos on the Atlantic coast of France. He also remained resolute in his enthusiasm for an invasion of Sumatra, exasperating his own chiefs of staff and especially Brooke. They opposed the scheme on its merits, and also knew that the Americans would never provide the necessary shipping. Washington was interested only in an offensive into upper Burma, to open a China passage. This, with deep reluctance, the British finally agreed to undertake.
Churchill's closest wartime colleagues, above all the chiefs of staff, emerged from the Second World War asserting the prime minister's greatness as a statesman, while deploring his shortcomings as a strategist. Yet no Allied leader displayed unbroken wisdom. Churchill's grand vision of the war was superb. Even acknowledging his delusions about the future of the British Empire, he articulated the hopes and ambitions of the Grand Alliance as no other man, including
Roosevelt, was capable of doing. His record as a warlord should be judged by what was done rather than by what was said. He indulged many flights of fancy, but insisted upon realisation of very few. The 1943 Aegean adventure was an exception rather than a commonplace. The operation of the British war machine should not be assessed in isolation, but rather by comparison with those of Britain's allies and enemies, and for that matter against the experience of every other conflict in history. By that measure, Churchill presided over a system of military planning and political governance which was a model for all time.
If, as those who worked with him believed, in 1944â45 he was no longer what he had been in 1940â41, this is not to be wondered at. Smuts told Eden after a lunch of the prime minister's: â
He may be mentally
the man he was, he may be, but he certainly is not physically. I fear he overestimates his strength and he will wear himself out if he is not careful.' The wise old South African took care to say this within earshot of the prime minister. Ismay was wryly amused by the sternness with which Smuts often urged on Churchill the care of his health, admonishing him for overstaying his bedtime. The prime minister responded â
rather like a small boy
being sent off by his mother'.
For all Churchill's exhaustion and ill health, his personal fearlessness persisted. He loved to watch the Luftwaffe's occasional night attacks from a Whitehall roof. â
The raids are very fine
to look at now,' he wrote to Randolph, who was in Yugoslavia, on 4 April, âbecause of the brilliant red flares which hang seemingly motionless in the air, and the bright showers of incendiariesâ¦sometimes I go to Maria's battery [Mary Churchill's anti-aircraft position] and hear the child ordering the guns to fire.' This was a lovely line. On 4 March, Jock Colville described the prime minister on a Saturday at Chequers:
Late at night, after the inevitable film, the PM took his station in the Great Hall and began to smoke Turkish cigarettes â the first time I have ever seen him smoke one â saying that they were the only thing he got out of the Turks. He keeps on referring to the point that he
has not long to live and tonight, while the gramophone played the Marseillaise and Sambre et Meuse, he told Coningham, Harold Macmillan, Pug, Tommy and me that this was his political testament for after the war: â
Far more important than India
or the Colonies or solvency is the Air. We live in a world of wolves â and bears.' Then we had to listen to most of Gilbert and Sullivan on the gramophone, before retiring at 3.0am.
A mooted Easter meeting with Roosevelt on Bermuda was aborted because the president was ill â indeed, his health never recovered from the strains of the Tehran conference. Brooke, Moran and others anyway opposed any further long flights by the prime minister. His desire to see Roosevelt was driven more by restlessness and exaggerated faith in his own persuasive powers than by any real need for a summit. On 4 April 1944, Churchill told the House of Commons that 197,005 of the United Kingdom's people had perished since the war began in September 1939. This figure omitted many others who were posted merely as missing, but would never come home. The public, and even some of those closest to power, perceived the war as entering its final phase. Churchill himself never succumbed to such a delusion, above all in the shadow of
Overlord
. Another hundred thousand Britons had yet to die before victory would be won. He must rouse himself, and his people, for new exertions.
The spring and summer of 1944 witnessed a flowering, albeit imperfect in the prime minister's eyes, of one of his most cherished inspirations: Resistance in occupied Europe and the Balkans. Back in 1940, Churchill famously ordered the Minister of Economic Warfare, Hugh Dalton:âSet Europe ablaze.' This instruction prompted the creation of Special Operations Executive, a secret organisation charged with promoting resistance â explicitly terrorism, armed action by non-uniformed civilians â everywhere that the Axis held sway. By submarine and small boat, plane and parachute, Britishtrained agents descended on Europe, and later South-East Asia, to establish contact with those willing to raise the banner of opposition to tyranny, albeit by means unsanctioned in the Geneva Convention. Events in France have received most attention from post-war chroniclers, though Resistance in Yugoslavia achieved much greater strategic significance, as Churchill perceived from 1943 onwards.
The men and women of SOE helped to create one of the enduring legends of World War II. It seemed then, as it still does today, especially heroic to risk torture and death alone, far behind enemy lines. Support for domestic insurrection represented a personal act of faith by the prime minister, which ran contrary to the views of many of his service advisers. He cherished a belief that the peoples of Europe could play an important part in their own liberation, declaring on 10 June 1941: âWe shall aid and stir the people of every conquered country to resistance and revolt. We shall break up and derange every effort which Hitler makes to systematize and consolidate his
subjugation.' At the prime minister's behest, a War Office planning document the same month addressed the promotion of resistance: â
Subjugated peoples must
be caused to rise against their oppressors, but not until the stage is set. The “attack from within” is the basic concept of such operations â and we should be able to do it in a bigger way than did the Germans. They had but a few Quislings to help them, and we have whole populations. The Patriots must be secretly organised and armed with personal weapons to be delivered to them by air if necessary.'
Churchill anticipated that indigenous peoples would play a major part in their own liberation. If the US entered the war, he wrote in a minute to Portal, the chief of air staff, on 7 October 1941, there would be â
simultaneous attacks by armoured forces
in many of the conquered countries which were ripe for revolt'. In a paper of 15 June 1942 he cited ârousing the populations' among the first objectives of Allied landings on the Continent. The mission of SOE was to hasten such ripening and ârousing'. In many books published even in the twenty-first century, accounts of what took place in the attempt to fulfil his vision are heavily coloured by romance. Reality was at least as interesting, but much more complex.
In June 1940, expressing to Canadian premier Mackenzie King his uncertainty about whether France would stay in the war, Churchill wrote: â
I hope they will
, even at the worst, maintain a gigantic guerrilla.' In the event, through the first years of occupation, France and the rest of Western Europe remained passive. Acts of violent opposition were sporadic. It took time for the trauma of defeat to be overcome, for like-minded defiant spirits to meet and coalesce into groups. The British were in no condition to offer assistance. Most important, only a tiny minority of people were willing actively to oppose the Germans. In the matter of Resistance, as in so much else, Churchill's heroic enthusiasm struck little resonance with the mood of Europe's citizens, preoccupied with more humdrum concerns. They needed to feed their families, earn wages, preserve roofs above their heads. All these simple human purposes were put at risk â mortal risk â by any defiance of the occupiers.
Violent demonstrations flew in the face of national consensuses. It was not that people liked the Germans, but that acquiescence in their hegemony appeared to represent the only rational course. Such prominent figures as the French writer André Gide, who utterly rejected collaboration with the occupiers, nonetheless dismissed the notion of violent opposition. Until the Soviet Union and United States entered the war, Hitler's grasp upon his empire was beyond military challenge. Britain's prime minister uttered stirring words, echoed by broadcasters speaking from London in many languages to oppressed peoples, but no British army was capable of re-entering the Continent. This made most people in Hitler's new dominions unwilling to threaten the welfare of their own societies by actions which promised retribution.
Even for those who wanted to fight, Churchill surely underestimated the difficulties of conducting guerrilla operations against an efficient and ruthless occupier in heavily urbanised regions of Europe. In Denmark, Holland, Belgium and large parts of France, there were few hiding places for armed bands. The Germans adopted policies designed to promote passivity. Any action against their forces brought down punishment upon entire communities.
On 27 May 1941, Churchill sent
a note to Lord Selborne, Dalton's successor at the Ministry of Economic Warfare, suggesting providing oppressed people with simple weapons and sticks of dynamite. Yet the use of âsimple weapons' by such âoppressed people' provoked determinedly disproportionate German responses. On 20 October that year, an Alsatian communist shot dead the German military commandant of Nantes, and made good his escape. Historian Robert Gildea has written: â
Far from welcoming
this assassination as the first step towards their liberation, the population of Nantes was horrified,' not least because the dead German seemed to local bourgeois an unusually sympathetic personality, though a ruthless anti-Semite. Ninety-eight civilian hostages were executed. This caused Maurice Schumann to broadcast from London on the BBC French Service, urging that such terrorist action should not be repeated. De Gaulle delivered the same message on 23 October: âIn war there are tactics. The war of the
French must be carried out by those in charge, that is, by myself and the National Committee.'
Churchill, however, dissented. He believed that it was essential to impose maximum pain and inconvenience upon the enemy. He deemed the deaths of hostages a necessary sacrifice for enabling the French people to show that they would not bow to tyranny, as most had indeed bowed since June 1940. He once told a meeting of the cabinet defence committee that while acts of resistance prompted bloody reprisals, âthe blood of the Martyrs was the seed of the Church'. The behaviour of Hitler's minions in occupied Europe had made the Germans hated as no other race had been hated, he said, and this sentiment must be exploited. He deplored any attempt to stifle resistance in the interests of innocent bystanders: â
Nothing must be done
which would result in the falling off of this most valuable means of harassing the enemy.' This was an extension of the view he adopted when Britain was threatened with invasion. In 1940, Generals Paget and Auchinleck urged that the civil population should be told to stay at home, rather than risk their lives offering ineffectual resistance to the Germans with scythes and brickbats. The prime minister strongly disagreed. In war, he said, quarter is given not on grounds of compassion, but to deter the enemy from fighting to the end: â
Here, we want every
citizen to fight desperately and they will do so the more if they know that the alternative is massacre.' What he expected from British civilians in 1940, he sought thereafter from those of occupied Europe.
Here was Churchill at his most ruthless. He was constantly fearful that, left to itself, Europe would lapse into subservience to Hitler's hegemony. It provoked his chagrin that few French people rallied to De Gaulle's standard not only in 1940, but through the years which followed. Usefully for Churchill's aspirations, Germany adopted towards most of its European empire policies so shamelessly selfish, as well as brutal, that even the rulers of Vichy France came progressively to understand that they could forge no partnership with their occupiers.
Berlin wanted only
economic plunder. Hitler's policies thus assisted those of Churchill.
Yet, at least until after D-Day in 1944, reprisals convinced most
people in the occupied countries that the cost of violent acts outweighed their value. The Norwegians, though strongly anti-German, conducted resistance with notable prudence. Norwegian special forces dispatched from Britain attacked occasional important targets, such as the Rjukan heavy water plant, but local people avoided open combat. In Czechoslovakia, the killing of Reinhard Heydrich, âProtector' of Bohemia and Moravia, on 27 May 1942 by Czechs parachuted from Britain, prompted shocking reprisals, most notoriously the slaughter of the 198 men of the village of Lidice, whose women were dispatched to concentration camps. Local Resistance groups were smashed. Many Czechs believe to this day that the assassination was mistaken, because it was purchased so dearly in innocent lives.
In France, the detonation of a roadside bomb in Marseilles prompted the Germans to demolish the entire
vieux quartier
of the city, making 40,000 people homeless. Terrasson, a pretty little town in south-central France, suffered heavily both from Resistance activism and German reprisals. â
The cycle is simple
,' its mayor Georges Labarthe wrote wretchedly to his mother in Paris in June 1944: âThe
maquis
conduct an operation, the Germans arrive, the civil population pay the tariff, the Germans go away and the
maquis
reappear. Where there are casualties among the Germans, the retribution is terrible. I must confess that in these circumstances it is hard to be the representative and defender of the people.'
In Western Europe Resistance achieved its greatest strength in wildernesses which mattered least to Hitler strategically â those most remote from potential invasion coasts. An overwhelming majority of people with large possessions â the aristocracy and the business community â collaborated with the occupiers, because they had most to lose. Many SOE agents captured by the Germans were betrayed by local inhabitants. British officers relied for assistance and shelter chiefly upon the little people of their societies â schoolteachers, trades unionists, peasant farmers. Only 20 per cent of letters opened by French censors even late in the war, in the first six months of 1944, expressed approval of âterrorism'. A typical comment was:âThe
maquis
act in the name of patriotism, but fortunately the police are getting
tough and I hope with all my heart that these youths are soon destroyed, for they commit all kinds of atrocities on innocent people.' Julian Jackson writes: â
Other evidence exists
that
maquis
violence was widely condemned.' In the Jura, where terrible German acts of savagery took place in 1944, some local doctors refused to tend resistance wounded. Many people refused fugitives shelter. Priests declined to say prayers for the dying. In Haute-Saône, the Vichyite prefect noted: âLess and less do the terrorists enjoy the complicity of the rural population.' Extreme repression, unbridled brutality, fuelled hatred but also fear. German policy was notably effective in suppressing dissent.
Churchill envisaged the peoples of Europe causing such trouble for the Germans that occupation became costly, even unviable. Yet untrained and ill-organised civilians could never aspire to defeat regular troops. âWhat is an army without artillery, tanks and air force?' demanded Stalin contemptuously about the Polish Resistance. âIn modern warfare such an army is of little use.' He was by no means wrong. The objection of many decent and patriotic Europeans to Resistance was that its sluggishly mounting tempo of violence sufficed to annoy the Germans, but imposed no crisis upon them. With brave and notable exceptions, it may be suggested that Resistance was most enthusiastically supported by those, both British and people of the occupied nations, who had no personal stake in local communities vulnerable to reprisals.
Some senior British officers opposed SOE's mandate on both pragmatic and ethical grounds. They perceived the unlikelihood of stimulating successful mass revolt, such as Churchill wanted, and were uncomfortable about promoting terrorism by armed civilians. The Chief of Air Staff, Portal, in February 1941 attempted to insist that one of the first SOE parties parachuted into France should wear uniform: âI think the dropping of men dressed in civilian clothes for the purpose of attempting to kill members of the opposing forces is not an operation with which the Royal Air Force should be associated,' he told Gladwyn Jebb of the Foreign Office. â
I think you will agree
that there is a vast difference, in ethics, between the timehonoured
honoured operation of the dropping of a spy from the air, and this entirely new scheme for dropping what one can only call assassins.' Such fastidiousness may seem ironic when displayed by one of the architects of area bombing. But it illustrates the sentiments of many senior service officers. Others, such as Sir Arthur Harris of Bomber Command, became fanatical foes of SOE, because they resented the diversion of aircraft to supporting its networks.
Sir Stewart Menzies and his subordinates of the Secret Intelligence Service hated their amateur rivals first on Whitehall territorial grounds, and second because in the field ambushes and acts of sabotage excited the Germans and made more difficult discreet intelligence-gathering by SIS's agents. An early SOE hand in the Middle East, Bickham Sweet-Escott, wrote of his own introduction to cloak and daggery: â
Nobody who did not
experience it can possibly imagine the atmosphere of jealousy, suspicion, and intrigue which embittered relations between the various secret and semi-secret departments in Cairo during that summer of 1941.' Matters were not much better a year later, when Oliver Lyttelton was dispatched to the Mediterranean as minister resident. He recorded: â
I was disturbed
â¦by the lack of security, waste and ineffectiveness of SOE.' The same strictures were often voiced in London.