What's The Context? Blogs by Gill Bennett 2013-2020. History Note No.23

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The Munich Agreement: 30 September 1938 Posted on: 30 September 2013

75 years ago today, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain flew back from Munich after two days of tense discussions with the German Chancellor, Adolf Hitler.

Neville Chamberlain arrives at Munich, 29 September 1938 (Bundesarchiv, Bild 183-H12967 / CC-BY-SA 3.0)

He had reached an agreement setting out a timetable and terms for the Nazi takeover of the German-speaking areas of Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland. And he had persuaded Hitler to sign a piece of paper stating that the two men were resolved to ‘continue our efforts to remove possible sources of difference and thus to contribute to assure the peace of Europe’. In a groundbreaking episode of ‘shuttle diplomacy’, on his third visit to Germany in as many weeks Chamberlain felt he had achieved his objectives: instead of an immediate Nazi occupation of the Sudetenland (as threatened until a few days earlier), there was to be a phased occupation of the German-speaking areas; and there was to be no general European war yet. The reality of the Munich Agreement Within a year, Czechoslovakia had been entirely overrun by Germany, and Britain was at war with Germany. ‘Munich’ became, and remains, a byword for shameful failure to stand up to dictators. Yet Chamberlain had been cheered by Germans in the streets of Munich; cheered when he returned to London on 30 September, declaiming from the Buckingham Palace balcony that ‘I believe it is peace for our time’ (a statement he immediately regretted). At 7.30 p.m. the Chancellor of the Exchequer opened the Cabinet meeting by expressing on his colleagues’ behalf ‘their profound admiration for the unparalleled efforts’ Chamberlain had made and for what he had achieved. Ministers were, Sir John Simon said, ‘proud to be associated with the Prime Minister as his colleagues at this time’. Even Duff Cooper, whose uneasiness with Munich led him to resign as First Lord of the Admiralty, recognised that Chamberlain had done better than expected. Munich was not an isolated crisis, but the latest episode in a five-year standoff in which Hitler made and broke successive promises and agreements in his bid to dominate central and eastern Europe, while the British government pursued a policy of neither saying it would, or would not fight, while buying time for rearmament.

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Articles inside

28 VJ Day: 15 August 1945

5min
pages 91-93

29 Signing the Anglo American Financial Agreement: 6 December 1945

5min
pages 94-96

27 Opening of the Potsdam Conference: 17 July 1945

3min
pages 89-90

24 Sentencing of atomic spy Klaus Fuchs: 1 March 1950

3min
pages 82-83

25 VE Day, the end of the war in Europe: 8 May 1945

5min
pages 84-86

26 Outbreak of the Korean War: 25 June 1950

4min
pages 87-88

26 July 1939

3min
pages 80-81

22 Signature of the North Atlantic Treaty: 4 April 1949

4min
pages 77-79

21 The British guarantee to Poland: 31 March 1939

5min
pages 74-76

20 Soviet forces invade Czechoslovakia: 20 to 21 August 1968

5min
pages 71-73

19 George Brown resigns as Foreign Secretary: 15 March 1968

5min
pages 68-70

18 The resignation of Anthony Eden: 20 February 1938

5min
pages 65-67

December 1917

5min
pages 62-64

16 Devaluation of Sterling: 18 November 1967

5min
pages 59-61

14 Fidel Castro enters Havana in triumph: 8 January 1959

10min
pages 53-58

May 1956

5min
pages 44-46

13 Spy George Blake escapes from Wormwood Scrubs: 22 October 1966

6min
pages 50-52

9 The execution of Edith Cavell: 12 October 2015

13min
pages 37-43

12 Nasser announces the nationalisation of the Suez Canal: 26 July 1956

5min
pages 47-49

8 An atomic bomb is dropped on Hiroshima: 6 August 1945

8min
pages 33-36

7 The Yalta Conference opens: 4 February 1945

8min
pages 29-32

Polish cryptologists reveal they have cracked the Enigma code

2min
page 28

Eden orders an enquiry into the disappearance of Commander ‘Buster’ Crabb

2min
page 14

6 President Richard M. Nixon announces his resignation: 8 August 1974

4min
pages 26-27

Frank Roberts’ ‘Long Telegram’: 21 March 1946

8min
pages 15-19

5 D Day: 6 June 1944

6min
pages 23-25

Foreword

3min
pages 6-7

Formation of the Cheka, the first Soviet security and intelligence agency: 20

1min
page 22

1. The Munich Agreement: 30 September 1938

7min
pages 9-12

2 The death of President John F Kennedy: 22 November 1963

2min
page 13
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