I am surprised that nobody who was involved in the Balkan Wars fled to South America.
Some of those Nazis would have made a better villain for Indiana Jones 4 than the Soviets did. A plot revolving around the resurrection of Hitler with the crystal skulls was more interesting than them being from aliens.
What do North Korea and China have to do with what I was talking about?
Step outside the ideological sandbox for a second. I'm saying that for the western Allies to invade the Soviet Union in 1945 would have been a war of aggression, pure and simple. There's no other way to describe attacking a country that did not attack you first.
Oh, if that's your problem, so what? You've just invaded / liberated most of Europe, Africa and half of Asia, what's one more country? Well, technically it would be several. Winner writes history, right?
The point is, and these people weren't shortsighted, that the Soviets would infest the rest of the world with Communism. Which they did. Which cost more lives than the damn world war.
There is some hilarious irony of you of all people telling me to step out of the ideological sandbox.
I think Churchill is more gray then you are making him out to be, he had some real faults, he was racist, an imperialist and a hypocrite, wanting Poland to be interdependent, but not India. But you seem to be criticize him for beating the drums of war, what was the alternative in 1939? Do what Chamberlain did and just Hitler have anything he wanted? Sometimes you need to beat the drums of war, it really depends on the war. Churchill's resolve to fight Nazism can be admired, well his other faults can be still be acknowledged. He wasn't a saint, but he wasn't a cartoon bad guy either.
I could not help being charmed, like so many other people have been, by Signor Mussolinis gentle and simple bearing and by his calm, detached poise in spite of so many burdens and dangers. Secondly, anyone could see that he thought of nothing but the lasting good, as he understood it, of the Italian people, and that no lesser interest was of the slightest consequence to him. If I had been an Italian I am sure that I should have been whole-heartedly with you from the start to finish in your triumphant struggle against the bestial appetites and passions of Leninism. I will, however, say a word on an international aspect of fascism. Externally, your movement has rendered service to the whole world. The great fear which has always beset every democratic leader or a working class leader has been that of being undermined by someone more extreme than he. Italy has shown that there is a way of fighting the subversive forces which can rally the masses of the people, properly led, to value and wish to defend the honour and stability of civilised society. She has provided the necessary antidote to the Russian poison. Hereafter no great nation will be unprovided with an ultimate means of protection against the cancerous growth of Bolshevism.
Nice post - very nuanced.
The thing is, when you compare anyone to Hitler, they're going to end up looking good, since Hitler was the cartoon bad guy par excellence. I just think the way we lionize Churchill as some kind of hero is a bit much, especially when you consider that his anti-communism led him to express admiration for the fascist leaders in the 1930s:
One may dislike Hitler's system and yet admire his patriotic achievement. If our country were defeated, I hope we should find a champion as indomitable to restore our courage and lead us back to our place among the nations.
Well, the winners write the history books, so naturally we look upon Churchill as a great leader. But he clearly wasn't as popular with rank-and-file Britons by the end of the war as history makes him out to be, if the 1945 election results are any guide.
Here's a Churchill quote that's actually about Hitler:
But without the Soviet Union, Mao could have never conquered all of China.
Of course history is written by the winners, who wants to back a loser? If the USSR had actually worked, we wouldn't be having this discussion, would we?
Morality is nice, but often has to make way for pragmatic reality. Besides isn't history fair in some of its casting of heroes and villains. Would you disagree with the negative treatment Nixon has gotten from history? Sometimes history gets its right and sometime it gets it wrong, but that's because it is written by flawed human beings, not perfect gods.
Actually, Stalin's USSR was very stingy when it came to assisting China. Mao conquered China with barely any help from the Soviet Union. He was able to accomplish this because:
1) Chiang Kai-Shek's Nationalists had depleted much of their forces in the war against Japan
2) American soldiers would have been unwilling to fight a war against a WWII-era ally (similar to Churchill's proposed war against the Soviet Union)
3) The presence of a massive Stalinist state on China's borders dissuaded the US from intervention
So the USSR was only one of many factors that led to Mao's victory.
It seems to me that Nixon has been vilified partly because he crossed a line: his crimes interfered with sections of the U.S. establishment, specifically the Democratic Party (through Watergate) and The New York Times. Basically, he offended the wrong people.
What about George W. Bush, he is regarded as a failure, was that unfair assessment? What about the Vietnam war being seen as a failure, is that unfair assessment?
You cannot judge everything based on morality alone, someone who has good intentions, but fails to realize them, will not have the same impact if they succeeded. Wars, elections, movements are often won by strategy, not morality. If someone thinks they can win a battle based on morality alone, they are doomed to fail. Morality is nice, but it often gives way to realistic pragmatism.