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The Traitor
© 1997-2008 by Geoffrey Miller
Please feel free to read this novel but note that all rights are
reserved and that no part of this publication may be further
reproduced by any means without the prior permission of the author,
Geoffrey Miller, who has asserted his right in accordance with
sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988
to be identified as the author of this work.
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NON-FICTION BOOKS BY GEOFFREY MILLER
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The Millstone
British Policy in the
Mediterranean, 1900-1914, the Commitment to
France
and British Intervention in the War
At half past two on the afternoon of
Sunday, 2 August 1914, Sir Edward Grey, the
Foreign Secretary, informed the French
Ambassador of the decision just reached by
the British Cabinet — despite not yet being
at war with Germany, if, nevertheless, the
German High Seas Fleet ventured out from its
base, the British fleet ‘would intervene …
in such a way that from that moment Great
Britain and Germany would be in a state of
war.’ What led to the giving of this pledge?
Was there an obligation on Britain’s part,
or merely a commitment, moral or otherwise,
to intervene in certain circumstances? The
Foreign Secretary subsequently declared in
his own defence that the promise to the
French ‘did not pledge us to war.’ Grey was,
however, wrong — once the promise was made,
British entry into the war was certain.
Despite this, a group within the Cabinet
spent the afternoon of Sunday 2 August
desperately searching for an issue around
which they could group, and which would
provide a more convenient excuse for British
entry into the war than one based upon a
moral commitment to France; that excuse was
to be Belgian neutrality. Two things virtually guaranteed British
entry in the war: the secret Anglo-French
military and naval talks, which commenced in
1906, and the naval position in the
Mediterranean. With Austria and Italy both
constructing dreadnoughts, and facing the
German naval challenge, British command of
the Mediterranean could no longer be
guaranteed. Similarly over-extended, the
French were unable to protect both their
Atlantic and Mediterranean coastlines. From
strategic necessity came political
expediency.
The Millstone will show:
- That Grey was more aware of what was settled
by the secret military conversations than he
pretended to be.
- That the situation created by the German
naval programme gave Britain no option other
than to evacuate the Mediterranean.
- That Anglo-French naval co-ordination and
strategic planning remained chaotic.
- That the Cabinet could not have prevented
Britain’s entry into the war; all they could
have done was to prevent the formation of a
coalition Government.
- That the pledge to France and consideration
of British interests were the sole
determinants of Britain’s entry.
- That the German promise in August 1914 not
to attack the French coast was irrelevant.
- That, far from informing the German
Government of the pledge given to Cambon as
he claimed, Grey was determined to conceal
this fact until Monday, 3 August.
- That the issue of Belgian neutrality was
used in August 1914 to assuage consciences
and prevent the formation of a coalition
Government, but was not crucial to the
decision to intervene.
- That the Continental policy, committing
British troops to fight in Europe, was
decided upon in August 1911 by a small inner
circle of the Cabinet who knew precisely
what it would entail.
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Given below is the
complete introduction which appears in "The Millstone".
This introduction is provided as a service to those who may be interested in the
subject. It provides an indication of the scope and content of the book but
please note that, in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1988,
it may not be reproduced without the prior permission of the author. Please see
the copyright notice in the panel at right. |
INTRODUCTION
On the morning of Wednesday, 20 December 1905, Major
General James Grierson mounted his charger, settled
his large frame in the saddle and commenced his
constitutional ride in the crisp winter air of Hyde
Park. As he trotted along Rotten Row another
military figure on horseback came into view. The
dapper, almost dandified, rider whose delicate
features were accentuated by an ornate, waxed
moustache was soon revealed to be Major Victor
Jacques Marie Huguet, the French Military Attaché.
It was, so Grierson claimed a few weeks later, a
chance encounter. At most other times, Grierson’s
word might have been accepted; however, with Germany
engaged in a periodic bout of sabre-rattling, and
with the threat of a Franco-German war over Morocco
pervading the diplomatic atmosphere, the meeting was
anything but a coincidence. Grierson, the Director
of Military Operations at the War Office, had had a
brilliant career, including a spell as Military
Attaché in Berlin. Untypically, he spoke French
‘with ease and fluency,’ and, in the opinion of
General Sir John French, ‘he used to astonish French
soldiers by his intimate knowledge of the history of
their regiments, which was far in excess of what
they knew themselves.’ Feeling completely at ease in
Grierson’s company, Huguet expressed the anxiety
felt in Paris that Germany may soon attack. However,
when Huguet then inquired about the current British
war organization, Grierson alleged that he did no
more than refer Huguet ‘to the Army List, which
shows [the war organization] and actually gives the
composition on mobilisation of a division which does
not exist in peace.’ Huguet, apparently satisfied by
this less than revealing answer, then inquired if
the General Staff ‘had ever considered operations in
Belgium’, to which Grierson replied that he himself
had worked out such a plan of operations the
previous spring, though only as a ‘strategical
exercise’. And that, maintained Grierson, to the
best of his recollection, ‘was all that passed
between us’.
Grierson’s memory, which also put the date of the
chance meeting ‘about the 16th or 18th December’,
was conveniently faulty. As the French reports show,
the Wednesday encounter was the first of two
meetings and, far from simply referring Huguet to
the Army List, Grierson in fact confirmed that up to
120,000 British troops would be available for
Continental operations, although the force lacked
the most up-to-date field artillery. Grierson also
dismissed the Admiralty’s proposed plan of
operations in the region of Schleswig-Holstein in
the event of war as ridiculous. Encouraged by what
he had heard, Huguet arranged to meet Grierson on
the following day. At this subsequent meeting
Grierson, effusive and indiscreet in equal measure,
informed Huguet of the latest General Staff study
which envisaged reinforcing the available British
force with two divisions currently serving in the
Mediterranean. Tactically, Grierson favoured
operating in Belgium; however, when pressed, he
admitted that the British force could land at Calais
where it would ‘unite with the French forces, of
whom it would, for example, form the left wing.’
Grierson then added a cautionary provision, which
would become a familiar litany to the French: the
General Staff deliberations should not be
interpreted as prejudicing the decision which the
British Government might take at any given moment.
This exchange was neatly to encapsulate the sorry
history of Anglo-French naval and military planning
during the following eight years. Plans — detailed
plans — could be formulated; plans which would allow
of no last-minute tinkering, and of no last-minute
faint-heartedness. But these plans were not to be
put into operation until a political decision had
been made. Events on the battlefield would have to
await Cabinet deliberations in London. However, with
the lack of overt Cabinet scrutiny before the war
(neither the Foreign Secretary, Sir Edward Grey, nor
the pre-war Liberal Prime Ministers,
Campbell-Bannerman and Asquith, showed any interest
in considerations of strategy) assumptions tended to
be made — assumptions which could never be admitted.
It was assumed by the General Staff that the British
Army would operate in Northern France or Belgium;
but this could never be admitted. It was assumed
that, if the British withdrew their battleships from
the Mediterranean at the same time as the France
transferred theirs into the Mediterranean, that
France would undertake to guard British interests in
return for an implied guarantee of her Northern
Coasts; but this could never be admitted. It was
assumed that, so long as France was not the
aggressor, British support would be forthcoming in a
Continental War; but this could never be admitted.
No wonder Grierson’s memory failed him.
This need to disguise the actual extent of
Anglo-French military and naval co-operation would
be evident throughout the pre-war period. As a
result of Grierson’s activities (and a simultaneous,
though independent, series of meetings instigated by
the Secretary of the Committee of Imperial Defence)
Grey, the incoming Foreign Secretary following the
fall of the Conservative administration, acquiesced
in January 1906 in the commencement of officially
recognized though informal Anglo-French staff talks.
It has always been accepted that Grey then left the
military and the naval planners to get on, with a
minimum of political interference; this was simply
accomplished by virtue of Grey’s own lack of
interest and by his deliberate action in not
informing the majority of his Cabinet colleagues
that the secret talks had commenced. Such an
interpretation has been emphasized by Grey’s own
comments. When, in April 1911, to protect his own
position Grey was forced to acknowledge that the
‘military experts then convened [in January 1906]’,
he added, ‘What they settled I never knew’. There is
evidence however that, in so far as military
planning was concerned, Grey knew more of what was
being decided than he admitted to (with regard to
naval planning Grey’s genuine ignorance was more a
product of the fact that there was no naval planning
to speak of, merely a succession of half-baked
schemes).
While Grierson and subsequent Directors of Military
Operations, particularly Sir Henry Wilson, further
integrated military strategy with their French
counterparts, despite the official go-ahead from
Grey in January 1906, Anglo-French naval
co-ordination and strategic planning remained
chaotic. The blame for this can be placed squarely
at the door of that most colourful of First Sea
Lords, Sir John Arbuthnot Fisher. An abysmal
strategist and a born centralizer, Fisher’s
undoubted gifts in other areas were balanced by his
refusal to countenance the formation of a naval war
staff. Similarly, the saga of joint war planning by
the Admiralty and War Office from 1905 till 1914
exhibits a depressingly marked failure to
co-operate. In the early years of the century, while
the Army was tarnished by its performance in the
Boer War, the Navy, overwhelmingly strong and with
no threat yet to appear on the horizon, held sway in
the nascent Defence Committee. Within a few years
the position was reversed. While the War Office
adapted to new realities, the Admiralty under Fisher
remained locked into a narrow range of strategic
options whose common denominator was their
impractical, if not suicidal, nature. During 1905
the Admiralty and War Office could not agree on a
joint plan of operations in a future war. When the
War Office version prevailed, Fisher took his bat
home. Then, in 1908, he thoroughly confused the
French with his invitation for them to assume
overall control in the Mediterranean. Fisher’s
excesses resulted in his opinions being discarded,
even when he had a legitimate grievance: ‘Are we or
are we not going to send a British Army to fight on
the Continent as quite distinct and apart from
coastal raids and seizures of islands, etcetera,
which the Navy dominate?’ he complained in 1909. The
accusation was a valid one; it went unanswered just
the same. Unfortunately, Fisher’s faults were also
evident in his successor, Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson.
So long as the German challenge remained a threat on
paper (and Fisher was fortunate that the launch of
Dreadnought severely disrupted the German
ship-building programme) there could be no real
winner between the Admiralty and General Staff
whenever strategic options were debated, although
greater weight was given to the General Staff
appraisal. By 1910, with Fisher’s departure and the
German naval programme now a reality, it had come to
a showdown. With the coming of the next major
crisis, the Admirals and the Generals would have to
fight it out until one of them won. The date for the
bout was 23 August 1911; the setting, a meeting of
the Committee of Imperial Defence to which only the
inner core of the Cabinet were invited. Both
protagonists were called Wilson — General Sir Henry
Wilson and Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson. There the
similarity ended. The one fluent, confident, a
master of his brief with a detailed and convincing
answer for every question; the other hesitant,
inarticulate, unsure of himself in
cross-examination. By the time the meeting had
finished late that afternoon the naval view of how a
future war would be fought had been comprehensively
demolished. Admiral Wilson had gone down for the
count. From that moment onward, despite some Cabinet
ructions by the Radical wing of the Liberal party,
tacit approval was given to the scheme by which a
minimum of four of the six regular divisions of the
British Army would operate on the left wing of the
French Army. Subsequently, any proper discussion of
the momentous new strategy would become submerged in
the minutiae of troop movements, railway timetables,
shipping requirements. The Continental commitment,
for that was what it was, like the debates in the
first winter of the war leading to the Dardanelles
Campaign, had developed a momentum of its own. Grey
acknowledged his powerlessness to control the
situation: it ‘would create consternation’, he
declared soon after the C.I.D. meeting, ‘if we
forbade our military experts to converse with the
French. No doubt these conversations and our
speeches have given an expectation of support. I do
not see how that can be helped.’ Nevertheless, it
remains the case that the Continental policy,
committing British troops to fight in Europe, was
decided upon in August 1911 by a small inner circle
of the Cabinet who knew precisely what it would
entail.
Another signpost on the road to war was Churchill’s
transfer to the Admiralty late in 1911. In response
to the proposed new German Navy Law, one of
Churchill’s first acts after settling in to the
position he coveted was to propose, in February
1912, the withdrawal of the Mediterranean
battleships. The German initiative had, in
Churchill’s view, rendered ‘the formation of an
additional Battle Squadron in Home waters necessary.
We cannot afford to keep fully commissioned
battleships abroad during these years of tension,’
Churchill argued, as the first days of war ‘would
require the maximum immediate development of naval
power in the North Sea and the Channel.’ The
proposal by the new First Lord of the Admiralty was
a further indication of British naval overstretch in
the face of new challenges and proof of Admiral Sir
John Fisher’s dictum, that ‘We cannot have
everything or be strong everywhere’. With the German
building programme continuing apace, and with
dreadnoughts being constructed in Italy and
Austria-Hungary, British command of the
Mediterranean could not be guaranteed by the force
of elderly battleships stationed at Malta in 1912.
The French meanwhile realized that their original
plan, to base the main part of their fleet on the
Atlantic coast so as the defeat Germany first before
then entering the Mediterranean was no longer
tenable. They could, naturally, have reacted to
altered strategic conditions by unilaterally moving
their fleet into the Mediterranean; much better,
however, if the move could be made at such a time
that it appeared contingent upon the planned British
withdrawal of the Mediterranean.
Although Churchill’s initial scheme, to denude the
Mediterranean almost completely, was over-ruled and
a compromise force of British battle-cruisers was to
be stationed at Malta from 1912, it was still open
to the French to argue, as they did successfully in
1914, that the transfer of their battle squadrons
was dependent upon the British evacuation and would
not have been taken without the presumption of
British assistance to protect the now denuded
Atlantic and Channel coasts of France. In London the
Cabinet fought against this presumption. As
Churchill continually insisted, ‘The present [naval]
dispositions represent the best arrangements that
either power can make independently. It is not true
that the French are occupying the Mediterranean to
oblige us. They cannot be effective in both theatres
and they resolve to be supreme in one.’ Ultimately,
this battle of words was lost. Semantics had been
overtaken by reality. The situation created by the
German, Italian and Austro-Hungarian naval
programmes, and the failure to reach an
accommodation with Berlin over the limitation of
warship building, gave Britain no option other than
to denude the Mediterranean. And this, despite the
specific injunction contained in the exchange of
letters between Grey and Paul Cambon, the French
Ambassador, in November 1912, was generally regarded
as part of a reciprocal arrangement with the French.
The heat which had built up during Sunday 2 August
1914 succeeded eventually in setting off a series of
heavy downpours, one of which resulted in breaking
up the meeting of Socialists in Trafalgar Square.
The cause for which they had congregated was already
a lost one. Earlier that afternoon, the Foreign
Secretary had informed Paul Cambon, of the decision
which had just been arrived at by, or rather, had
been forced upon, the British Cabinet after days of
rancorous debate. Despite not yet being at war with
Germany, Grey declared that if the German fleet
‘came into the Channel or entered the North Sea …
with the object of attacking the French coasts or
the French navy and of harassing French merchant
shipping, the British fleet would intervene … in
such a way that from that moment Great Britain and
Germany would be in a state of war.’ It was to be
Grey’s defence, both at the time and after, that
this assurance, ‘did not bind us to go to war with
Germany unless the German Fleet took the action
indicated, but it did give a security to France that
would enable her to settle the disposition of her
own Mediterranean Fleet.’ The disposition of the
Mediterranean Fleet had, in fact, been settled in
1912. This was clearly just another example of
Grey’s strategic ignorance — or was it? It continued
to suit Grey to deny any awareness of what had been
decided by the military and naval planners. Grey
would also claim that the German Government was made
aware of the pledge; in fact, Grey was determined to
conceal this fact until the afternoon of Monday, 3
August. For Cambon, when he was informed of the
pledge, the feeling was similar to that which would
be experienced by Churchill twenty-seven years later
when news was brought to him of the Japanese attack
at Pearl Harbor. ‘So we had won after all!’ was
Churchill’s immediate response in December 1941. In
August 1914 Cambon also knew precisely what Grey’s
declaration meant: ‘The game was won’, he
subsequently stated. ‘A great country does not make
war by halves.’
What led to the giving of this pledge? Was there an
obligation on Britain’s part, or merely a
commitment, moral or otherwise, to intervene in
certain circumstances? Grey was to insist in his
memoirs that the promise to the French ‘did not
pledge us to war.’ The Foreign Secretary was,
however, wrong — once the promise was made, as
Cambon appreciated, British entry into the war was
certain. Despite this, a group within the Cabinet
would then spend the remainder of the afternoon and
evening of Sunday 2 August desperately searching for
an issue around which they could group, and which
would provide a more convenient excuse for British
entry into the war than one based upon a moral
commitment to France, of which the public was
generally unaware; that excuse was to be Belgian
neutrality. However, despite protestations to the
contrary, the issue of Belgian neutrality was a
blind: it was used to assuage consciences and to
prevent the formation of a coalition Government but
it was not crucial to the British decision for
intervention.
In what follows I will attempt to show that two
circumstances and one overriding fact guaranteed
British entry in the war in August 1914: the two
circumstances were the secret Anglo-French military
and naval conversations, and the naval position in
the Mediterranean. The overriding fact was the
consideration of British interests. The problem of
contending with the superior numbers of the German
Army was not going to be solved immediately by
French planners merely by the dispatch of a British
Expeditionary Force. Yet the French realized that if
one British soldier set foot on French soil, others
would follow. Indeed, so confident were they that
there was no attempt made to conceal the intention.
For example, General Sir Henry Wilson spent the
afternoon of 14 January 1910 at the École Supérieure
de Guerre being lectured by General Foch on the
functioning of the college. With the lecture
completed, Wilson and Foch then ‘talked at great
length of our combined action in Belgium’ in the
event of a war with Germany. ‘What’, Wilson inquired
of Foch, ‘would you say was the smallest British
military force that would be of an practical
assistance to you in the event of a contest such as
we have been considering?’ Foch did not hesitate:
‘One single private soldier’, he replied instantly,
‘and we would take good care that he was killed.’
Furthermore, with British military support assured,
France could then count upon the full might of the
Royal Navy.
With British command of the Mediterranean in doubt,
the French, similarly over-extended, were unable to
protect both their Atlantic and Mediterranean
coastlines. From strategic necessity came political
expediency. The convergence of British and French
interests, which had commenced with the signing of
the Entente Cordiale in 1904, had continued
gradually until 1911, after which it accelerated. By
1914 British and French interests were inseparable.
Although, between 1906 and 1911, the main push for
closer Anglo-French military co-operation was
provided by the French (Cambon would become a
familiar sight at the Foreign Office in times of
crisis), a change was evident from 1911 following
the most serious of the many pre-war crises, when a
German gunboat was dispatched to the sleepy African
port of Agadir. In 1906, in the aftermath of the
First Moroccan Crisis, the German naval challenge,
which had not yet made any serious inroads, was
dealt a huge blow by the launch of HMS Dreadnought.
‘We can protect ourselves of course,’ Grey declared
emphatically at the time, ‘for we are more supreme
at sea than we have ever been.’ By 1911, and the
Second Moroccan Crisis, the Cabinet had already
weathered a first class naval scare when, in 1909,
it was thought, erroneously, that Germany would
achieve parity with the Royal Navy in dreadnoughts
within a matter of years. ‘Splendid isolation’ was
no longer a feasible option. The consistent theme
running through the deliberations in London in the
wake of the Agadir crisis was fear of French
weakness and how this would impact upon the British
position. This would not have mattered so much had
the Royal Navy maintained its earlier lead over the
German High Seas Fleet. Following the very real
scare, the conclusion to be drawn from the 1911
crisis was obvious to some: the Entente had outlived
its usefulness; it was time to replace it with an
alliance. But the Cabinet could not bring itself to
accept this conclusion; heads remained buried in the
sand.
When war erupted on the Continent in the summer of
1914 the Cabinet suddenly had to ask itself some
searching questions — questions which should have
been posed years previously. Was there at the very
least on the British side a moral commitment to
France? If so, could the Cabinet have refused to
honour it? Did this commitment (whether moral or
not) entail an obligation? Was the unwritten pledge
to France to be the sole determinant of British
intervention in the war or was the consideration of
British interests to be paramount? Did the two in
fact coincide? As the great Continental armies
mobilized, the Cabinet deliberated, at once
destroying Henry Wilson’s scheme for simultaneous
Anglo-French mobilization. To the Cabinet debates
must be added some further, more speculative,
queries: Realistically, could Britain have remained
out of the war? If the commitment had been
formalized, and replaced by a specific obligation,
would the same decisions have been taken in the last
week of July 1914? Was the outcome of the British
refusal to conduct military conversations openly
with the French a lack of British influence upon
French war planning, with the result that the
disastrous French Plan XVII went unchallenged? Could
the Cabinet have prevented Britain’s entry into the
war or, with the unrelenting pressure of ‘events’,
could they have done no more than to prevent the
formation of a coalition Government? What bearing
did operational orders issued unilaterally by
Churchill and the Admiralty in the final days of
peace have on Cabinet deliberations?
But the questions do not end there — how had this
situation arisen in the first place? Symptomatic of
the Liberal administration from 1906 to 1914 was its
ambivalent attitude, with certain key exceptions
(principally Churchill and Haldane), to the overall
issue of defence. This same attitude explains in
part Grey’s hesitancy in divulging the opening of
Anglo-French military conversations. In the
political culture of the day, the General Staff and
Admiralty were given a free hand — too free a hand —
in the belief that they knew best. Exacerbating
this, in so far as the Admiralty was concerned, was
the genuine sense of awe in which Fisher was held.
This allowed his malign influence in the question of
a Naval War Staff and his refusal to co-operate with
the War Office on joint planning to go unchecked. In
view of Fisher’s early pronouncements in favour of a
Naval War Staff, what explains his subsequent
antipathy? Fisher’s legacy was to be a distinctly
unhelpful one. With serious naval war planning
virtually non-existent, the strategic impetus
shifted by default to the War Office. Would the
General Staff have won the battle in the C.I.D. on
23 August 1911 quite so easily had the First Sea
Lords been Fisher since 1904 and then Wilson since
1910? These faults could have been put right
following Churchill’s transfer to the Admiralty in
1911; however, Churchill had faults of his own.
Naval policy, which could have been simplified if a
formal Anglo-French convention had been concluded,
was instead complicated by the conditional nature of
joint planning, by the emergence of new challenges,
and by the financial priorities of the Liberal
administration. The response was to be decidedly ad
hoc, so that the Government reacted to events and
not in anticipation of them — this helps to explain
the numerous defence scares which punctuated the
political scene. Furthermore, without a Naval War
Staff before 1912, and then with an emasculated one
until the outbreak of war, there was no systematic
approach to the problem of overstretch. So, was the
stationing of the battle cruisers at Malta after
1912 an inspired compromise or an admission that
these ships had no part to play in the North Sea?
Was the 1909 German dreadnought scare a ploy to prod
an administration perceived as financially stringent
and intent on diverting funds to social causes? Were
the Anglo-German naval talks of 1912 bound to fail
in the face of German and British suspicion and
French unease and pressure? What was the rationale
behind the Austro-Hungarian dreadnought building
programme? Was Churchill correct in his assertion
that the French and British moves into and out of
the Mediterranean were made independently of each
other? What effect did the German spy in the Russian
Embassy in London have on naval planning in Berlin?
Was there, as Nicholas Lambert asserts, a secret
policy of ‘substitution’ in place at the outbreak of
the war by which dreadnought construction would give
way to an increased number of submarines?
Indeed, Lambert goes further, and argues the case
for a ‘major revision of our understanding of
pre-1914 British naval policy.’ Basing this finding
on his own research and that of Jon Sumida, Lambert
claims that ‘the strategic thought of Britain’s
naval leadership has been fundamentally
misrepresented. In addition, a reappraisal of naval
thinking is almost certain to produce significant
changes in the understanding of British defense
policy before the First World War. There must be
serious doubts over not only the accuracy of the
currently accepted historical narrative but also the
methodology used to produce it.’ Was the
substitution policy, if it can be dignified by that
name, a genuine shift in tactics or merely a
possible reaction to British dreadnought
preponderance in the North Sea? Is Lambert’s
contention supported by the evidence? Although he
used the excuse of increased Italian and Austrian
building to help justify an increase in the Naval
Estimates, what was Churchill’s own view of the
Mediterranean situation? If answers can be provided
to these questions, it may then be possible to
decide whether British interests in the
Mediterranean were capable of being safeguarded
adequately, or whether, by virtue of the obligations
it entailed and the threats posed elsewhere,
Britain’s continuing presence in the Middle Sea was,
in the words of a noted nineteenth writer on naval
affairs, a ‘Millstone Round the Neck of England’.
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Contact
Information
Geoffrey Miller can be contacted by:
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Telephone
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+ 44 1262 850943
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FAX
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International: +44 (0) 1262 850943
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Postal address
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The Manor House,
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Electronic mail
- General Information:
gm@resurgambooks.co.uk
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