The Independent
By John Charmley, Professor of history at the University of East Anglia
29 January 2005
In Algiers in 1943, Churchill told Harold Macmillan that he was not sure that history would judge him to have been a great man. When Macmillan expressed surprise at this, Churchill replied that to future generations he might look like Cromwell, who, obsessed with Britain's old enemy, Spain, had missed the rise of the new threat from France. It was a typically Churchillian piece of reasoning, and, of course, he went on to try to prove himself wrong by warning of the danger from the USSR in his famous "Iron Curtain" speech at Fulton, Missouri, in March 1946.
He need not have worried. Whatever a "great man" might be, Churchill qualifies on all counts, and it would be futile to challenge his claims to the status he so desired. But great men can commit great mistakes, and Churchill's are on the same gargantuan scale as his achievements.
One of the curious features of the secular canonisation of Winston Churchill, stemming, perhaps, from the needs of his American admirers, is the way in which the cult has created a Churchill shorn of the characteristics that made him such a controversial figure for most of his career. It has created a Churchill akin to the waxwork Lenin in Red Square.
The causes to which Churchill devoted his career were typical of imperialists of his age and background. The "wilderness years" of the 1930s were not some strange aberration when political pygmies kept a great man from office, they were the inevitable result of Churchill's crusted Toryism. As early as the 1920s he was writing about the "failed 20th century", and by the 1930s he was musing aloud about the failure of the democratic experiment. When Lord Robert Cecil wrote that he thought Churchill took no interest in politics unless it involved the chance of a little bloodshed - preferably communists, but home-grown trades unionists would do - he was expressing a common view.
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