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  1. Buchanan accuses Churchill and Grey of getting Britain to enter the war in 1914 by making promises that Britain would defend France without the knowledge of Cabinet or Parliament.

    • Pat Buchanan
    • 2008
  2. Jul 17, 2008 · When bringing up this quote, Buchanan typically follows it up with reversing the term back on Churchill. The war was unnecessary, Churchill said, because of the constant blunders before the war that got us into it.

  3. Aug 28, 2020 · Churchill’s foresight, his decisions to call out the Reserves and put Jellicoe in command, were all confirmed by events. Patrick Buchanan’s assessment that Churchill abetted the coming of war is incorrect. Until Europe was engulfed by the First World War, he did everything he could to avert it.

  4. May 14, 2009 · Churchill’s decision, Buchanan says, caused Hitler to attack Russia—not the “greatest blunder in history,” mind you—to show the British that they could expect no help from the Soviets. So Britain had to turn to the United States, and was taken to the cleaners financially as a result.

  5. Buchanan has brought the term up in several interviews a statement made by Winston Churchill. In his memoirs, Churchill, who led Britain to victory in World War II, wrote: One day President Roosevelt told me that he was asking publicly for suggestions about what the war should be called.

  6. May 21, 2008 · Patrick Buchanan, the conservative commentator and two-time presidential candidate, launches a sustained attack on Churchill in a new, lengthy book, "Churchill, Hitler, and 'The Unnecessary...

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  8. It was a part of the Welshman's thesis that the Great Powers of Europe, against their will and largely because of the dilatoriness and incompetence of men like Grey in the foreign ministries, slid unwittingly into war.7 His attitude at the time had been somewhat different.

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