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Airstrip One
by Emmanuel Goldstein
Antiwar.com
April 18, 2000
The Empire Struck Back
Despite the great heroism of the Imperial troops, the Empire almost killed
Britain in 1940

BRITAIN’S DOORSTEP
In 1940 Britain almost died. German troops had defeated Britain in France. Only
by a stroke of luck had the majority of British troops managed to make it home,
lightly armed. France and Poland, Britain’s European allies had been smashed.
Britain was bleeding gold and assets to her creditors. Hitler was on our
doorstep and we were running out of money. It was a desperate time. However,
Britain did have allies, the Commonwealth and Empire. They helped her through,
indeed they may have been the key to her survival. Really?

IMPERIAL BRAVERY
This article will argue that Britain’s empire was a liability that almost
killed her. What it will not argue is that Britain was badly served by the
troops of the Empire. The Imperial troops fought bravely in a fight that, from
a strategic standpoint, was mostly not their fight. Canada was under no threat
whatsoever considering the friendly relations she enjoyed with America. South
Africa and Rhodesia put many troops into action without a German colony on
their whole continent. The Indians, the Australians and the New Zealanders went
further. They put themselves at risk from the Japanese by involving themselves
in a European quarrel. In addition, many other colonies from Britain’s
extensive Empire endured siege or occupation bravely. There is no questioning
the bravery and selflessness of the Imperial troops. However, would Britain
have fought better without an Empire?

GARRISONING THE WORLD
The strength of Britain’s empire was supposedly due to its size. It was the
Empire’s very size that almost killed Britain. Britain’s peacetime army
stationed a third of her army in India and a sixth of it in the other (non-
Dominion) colonies. That was a half of the admittedly small army. This was over
and above the troops raised from the colonies. So half of Britain’s army was
stationed abroad, when it was quiet. The British Navy was also stationed abroad
in the South Atlantic, the Mediterranean, the Pacific; anywhere it seemed apart
from British waters.

OVERSTRETCH
Britain’s actual deployments, however, were dwarfed by her potential
deployments. Looking at the old school maps where the British realms were
coloured red makes one realise just how overextended the British were. The
British Empire bordered on China, Tibet, Afghanistan, Thailand, the French,
Dutch and Portuguese empires, Argentina, Guatemala, Brazil, Venezuela, Iran and
many other countries. Then there was the question of internal revolts in a vast
and diverse Empire, groups as different as the Afrikaans National Party and the
Indian Congress opposed the war. Britain was lucky that so many of them were
neutral rather than actively hostile. Another point was the informal Empire.
The British Empire was on four different levels. Firstly there were the
independent dominions; then there was India, which was in a category of its
own; then the colonies, which included everything else under formal British
domain; and finally there were the protectorates. These were independent states
that signed military alliances with Britain, in order to protect the extended
trade routes within the Empire. Kuwait, Qatar and Sharijah in the Persian Gulf
guarded the oil routes. Egypt allowed the Suez Canal through. Kashmir and Nepal
were relics from the Great Game in the Himalayas. How could a nation of forty
five million people be expected to protect all of it?

THE FINEST HOUR
Of course, Britain could not protect all her Empire at once. She did not expect
to. The First World War may have been fought on a wide canvass, but it was
still a predominantly European battle. This was not the case in the Second
World War, which was fought ferociously in Asia, the Pacific and North Africa.
Britain was simply unable to defend everyone at once. That the Royal Navy would
not sail to the Far East as promised is still a source of bitterness to many
Australians. In fact, the promise was made in anticipation of the French fleet
holding the Mediterranean and Churchill promised the fleet if Australia or New
Zealand was attacked "on a large scale", whatever that meant. Even where there
where British troops, this did not always help, with an inadequately defended
Malaya leading the Japanese Army to the fortress of Singapore. Suddenly Britain
found her great strength to be a fatally bleeding wound.

THE DOMINION’S STATE
Britain’s lack of preparation for the Second World War is now an historical
commonplace. However, compared to her dominions or colonies Britain was
positively martial. The Dominions (Australia, New Zealand, Canada and South
Africa) had 40% of the population of Great Britain. Yet they provided five
divisions to Britain’s thirty-four in 1940. Britain also provided 90% of
munitions production in the same year. This was understandable in Canada or
South Africa with no direct threat, but a resurgent Japan meant that Australia
and New Zealand could not take the same attitude. However, in 1935 they were
spending half as much per head on defence as the British were. The burden of
defending them would inevitably come on the British Navy, a burden Britain
found itself unable to meet.

THE TEMPTATIONS OF POWER
How did Britain allow herself to get into this mess, almost committing national
suicide in the process? The answer is that she did not realise what she was
doing. Where most Empires come from the ruthless application of military and
economic might for a specific strategic purpose, some do not. The British are
an example of this later group. The British simply took large areas of the
world because they were unchallenged. This meant that small groups of people,
often organised into private companies, took over huge areas of the globe.
North America, Australasia, India and South Africa were all quickly taken up
because the British had no significant maritime rivals from the eclipse of
Louis XIV until the First World War. The empire was effortless and unconscious,
except for a few lucid moments such as the infamous scramble for Africa.
Britain had overextended herself because she met so little resistance. Does
this sound familiar?

THE GUILTY MEN
What is so frustrating about the whole process is that there was the
opportunity afforded by the breathing space between the first and second world
wars to rid Britain of her Empire. Although it could be argued that India’s
Congress movement was not prepared for self-government by the early 1930s, the
same could be said fifteen years later and this time there would have been no
Muslim League or partition with Pakistan. The colonies could have been force
fed independence with no adverse consequences to either Britain or the
colonies. The Dominions were already independent, Britain could, if she had
been more clearly sighted have severed the military guarantees with the
Dominions, the Dominions under threat would have had to raise military spending
to British levels. The fact was that this was not done. Instead, the British
Empire actually increased. The collapse of the Ottoman Empire meant that
Britain and France were suddenly thrown into the Arabian cauldron. The loss of
German overseas possessions meant that Britain and her Dominions suddenly had a
cluster of new protectorates on their hands. When the over extension was
starting to show, Britain expanded her Empire that bit further.

THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY
My pessimistic analysis of the effect of the British Empire has a certain
exception. One former British colony in the end saved Britain. Well in fact it
was thirteen former colonies and thirty-five other states. (Pedants here will
point out that Maine, West Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky were also part of
the former colonies so it is closer to thirty-one other states). It is
undoubtedly the case that, as Bismarck predicted in 1898, the dominant factor
of the twentieth century was that North America spoke English. American
industrial might, scientific ability and military manpower dragged Britain out
of the mire. Even if Britain could have survived without American military
intervention, it is hard to see how she could have survived without the raw
materials and industrial output made in the USA. The question must be asked,
why was America different? The answer is obvious; America became independent
sooner. The decisions on the economy, the land and immigration where made with
America in mind rather than a remote mother country. Naturally America
flourished and grew. The very fact that Britain lost in 1769 saved her in 1940.

A WARNING FOR TODAY
Empires are dangerously seductive things. They make you feel big. In the case
of England, and America, they seem effortless. However, they do have their
dangers, and in more cases than we realise, they can cripple otherwise healthy
patients. The problem is if they come about so naturally, can they be stopped?
My answer is that they may be able to be. However, in Britain even Gladstone, a
man opposed in his very core to the notion of empire, acquiesced with imperial
expansion in Africa. Even if the flow towards empire can be diverted, it will
need a great deal of willpower. Nevertheless, the example of Britain’s near
death experience in 1940 should provide the impetus to try to summon as much
willpower as possible.
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