| Federal
Union was born in September 1938 at the time of 'Munich'; by anger
out of desperation.
'Munich' finally forced everyone to declare themselves.
One side saw Chamberlain's journeys and signature as a brave action,
vindicating his policy of appeasement. We and our children should
be eternally grateful; war had been averted. The other side saw
it as a shameful surrender in a long line of surrenders. Antagonisms
became passionate: long-time friends stopped speaking to each other,
families became divided. And Hitler ranted on regardless.
Chamberlain's policy of 'appeasement' was the
product of a government dominated by a generation of men who had
been too old to fight in 1914. They had thought to restore their
own pre war Victorian values; the right to separate nationhood,
and of each nation to decide its own foreign policy backed by its
own armed forces to defend that independence. The individual sovereignty
of each nation was held to be sacrosanct; it was the duty of its
young male citizens to die for it if necessary. Any difference of
interest between nations would be solved reasonably by diplomats
from the parties involved.
The sons of that older generation had fought in
the trenches. But those who had survived did not take over. They
retired into themselves and the nightmares of what their forbears
had called on them to do; and what they had seen and done. It was
a generation which took little part in government, leaving it to
the old men, now joined by the 'profiteers who had done well out
of the war', to carry on. Those of them who did take part in government
such as Eden and Macmillan, dismissed by Neville Chamberlain as
the 'Boys Brigade', had been brought up in their fathers' values.
They could differ with their elders but could not find it in themselves
to break with them. They could approve the idea of a League of Nations
bound by a communal alliance, but not at the expense of diplomacy
between individual states and the creation of alliances and counter
alliances; these remained the order of the day. The umbilical cord
proved too strong and proved lethal. The idea that the League of
Nations should be a body, which could override one to one diplomacy
between nations, and take action in its own name on behalf of them
all, in the way that the Covenant of the newly created League seemed
to make possible, was no part of their thinking. The League, in
fact, had neither authority nor power to do so. Its constitution
laid down that each member remained free to conduct its own diplomacy,
backed if necessary by its own forces. It was an escape hatch for
those who wanted to renege on collective action.
That generation was followed by one which had
been too young to fight in 1914; but was just the right age to be
called on now in 1939.
It was a generation which had been brought up
with the writings of Norman Angell, H G Wells and Bertrand Russell
and many others, together with a host of journals, as well as talk
in the many branches of the League of Nations Union up and down
the country. All identified 'national sovereignty' as the menace
and the root from which wars developed. It had been brought up to
regard 'collective security' under the Covenant of the League of
Nations as a pledge that their fathers had not sacrificed their
lives in vain; 'Covenant', with it's biblical connotation, was an
appropriate word. Though of age to fight it was a generation which
was not experienced enough to take part in government - even Eden
and Macmillan from the previous generation, were treated as no more
than promising apprentices to be ignored or sidelined by their elders.
The old men in control, however, found 'collective security' a useful
vote winner; but privately held the idea in contempt. The young
were naive enough to believe that they meant what they said.
The moment of truth came in 1935 when Mussolini
began threatening to invade Abyssinia. In June eleven million people
in Britain voted for sanctions against Italy if Mussolini carried
out his threats - nine million of them for military sanctions. "Terribly
mischievous" according to 66 year old Neville Chamberlain,
already prime minister in waiting.
A paraphrase of Harold Macmillan's account (Wind
of Change) of what followed may be cited. On 11 September the British
foreign secretary, Samuel Hoare made what he described as 'a revivalist
appeal to the Assembly of The League. At best, he said, it might
start a new chapter of League recovery. The speech, however, had
been minutely vetted by the Foreign Office and Neville Chamberlain.
Nevertheless Hoare boldly proclaimed: "The League stands, and
my country stands with it, for the collective maintenance of the
Covenant in its entirety ....If the burden is to be borne, it must
be borne collectively. On behalf of His Majesty's government, I
can say that in spite of these difficulties, that Government will
be second to none in its intention to fulfil, within the measure
of its capacity, the obligations which the Covenant lays upon it".
The following day two battle cruisers and a cruiser squadron arrived
in Gibraltar, supporting his words.
The effect throughout the world, Macmillan recorded,
was sensational. Belgium's representative at the League, for example,
reported: "the British have decided to stop Mussolini, even
if it means using force". In Britain, Macmillan wrote, the
'response was immediate and impressive; the sense of national unity
and pride was aroused'; 'Once more we were going to take our right
place in the world. America was neutral, Germany hostile; the democratic
nations now looked to us, and we would not fail them. Britain was
back in the lead'.
Mussolini called the old men's bluff; went ahead
and invaded Abyssinia. There was then a pause while Baldwin called
a general election; it had the effect of giving the old men a breathing
space to recover from their shock. Baldwin fought the election on
a policy which included support for the League and of rearmament
as support for collective security. In the meantime the diplomats
and Neville Chamberlain among others, quietly got to work to undo
the damage which, in their eyes, Hoare's speech had done.
Having won the election on a policy of support
for the League, however, the government, as Macmillan wrote, were
in 'honour bound, in spite of a sentence here or there of reservation,
to stop Mussolini. When the House of Commons met in November, no
one - inside or outside Parliament - doubted that this was their
firm purpose'. The Foreign Secretary and the Foreign Office thought
otherwise. Within a fortnight the British Foreign Secretary, Samuel
Hoare, stopped off in Paris on way to a holiday in Switzerland;
the head of the Foreign Office just happened to be in Paris too;
and the deal with Pierre Laval leaving Mussolini free to occupy
almost all of Abyssinia, was agreed and signed without any consultation
with London. Abyssinia was left with what the Times famously described
as "a corridor for camels", to reach the sea.
In his biography of Neville Chamberlain, written
some quarter of a century later, Iain Macleod judged correctly.
"Historically", he wrote, "the Abyssinia crisis has
often been presented as a side-show compared with the main drama
of Germany's advance to world conquest. In fact it was the turning
point of the thirties. Hitler was not slow to act upon this evidence
of our weakness". Within a couple of months his troops occupied
the Rhineland in violation of Versailles. Like Mussolini in Abyssinia,
he was unopposed.
Hoare's squalid betrayal of Abyssinia finally
killed off the League of Nations; it had been shown to be terminally
impotent without leadership. Britain had had its chance to take
the lead and had funked it. Hoare and his elderly associates had
successfully put an end to any future action in the name of the
League. The deception that 'collective security' could be relied
on to work, and the treachery which had ensured that it didn't,
had been uncovered. The memorial to the millions who had died in
the 1914 war had been demolished without shame. The old men were
seriously taken aback by the public reaction and discussed desperately
where to lay the blame; finally they had to sacrifice Hoare and
let Eden take his place.
But as 1936 went on all attention became concentrated
on the gathering pace of events - the Rhineland occupation, Hitler's
and Mussolini's participation in the Spanish Civil War on the side
of a fellow dictator, and Britain's non intervention, then the murder
of Dollfuss and the occupation of Austria. Many of the young had
already taken sides and had been so outraged that they had gone
to Spain to fight against the dictators. But in general public opinion
only began to feel the stirrings of fear; while remaining incredulous.
Few were ready to think the unthinkable: that the dictators might
have ideas beyond putting right what many felt had been wrong with
the Peace Treaty of 1919. However useful they might be as a 'bulwark
against Communism', the dictators might after all, be mad enough
to be heading for a repeat of past horrors: a revenge war which
would reassert their national pride. A divide in public opinion
was beginning to open which would become a chasm at Munich. In the
following year Neville Chamberlain, now Prime Minister, effectively
took charge of relations with the Dictators, acting behind Eden's
back; and the divide inevitably widened.
It was against this background, not surprisingly
since it was all their futures which were at stake, that very many
of the young were debating among themselves the reasons for the
failure of the League of Nations in which they had been encouraged
by their elders to invest so much confidence. In 1935 two young
men who had attended the same school and left Oxford only two years
previously found themselves working for the same boss, One, Derek
Rawnsley, soon left in order to start two businesses of his own;
both to do with pictures. The other, Charles Kimber, stayed on in
the press and political division of oil companies, aiming for a
career in politics. They took to lunching together more or less
weekly and were often joined by others. Inevitably the same question
arose and a general agreement emerged that heads of states, each
acting in the name of his state (echoes of l'etat c'est moi) could
not be trusted to act collectively. The League itself should have
had power to act; that to do so it needed forces under its own command;
and should have consisted of elected members to authorise their
use, rather than party political heads of state, each claiming to
represent even those in opposition to him.
Munich was more than Rawnsley could stomach. He
rang Kimber and said "Charles, we must do something. If you
leave old Mudlitup, ( our nickname for our boss) you can have a
room in my office in Gordon Square and we'll start an organisation".
Kimber feeling no less strongly, at once resigned his job and transferred
to Rawnsley's offices at 44 Gordon Square. There, he set about writing
a pamphlet which was to set out what the organisation should stand
for. As he did so, the two were introduced to Patrick Ransome, a
freelance journalist with a first class degree in international
law. He told them that what they were proposing was a federation;
and offered to come in with them.
The pamphlet was agreed between the three and
duplicated. All three then sent copies to any of their friends who
might be interested and an enthusiastic meeting of some sixty or
seventy people endorsed what had been written. What is more they
put up money to have it printed and distributed, Kimber then selected
some 400 names from Who's Who who had shown interest in international
affairs, and posted the pamphlet under the title 'Federal Union'
with a covering handwritten letter to each..
The response was astonishing; and he and Ransome
(Rawnsley being preoccupied with his businesses) were kept busy
interviewing those who had replied. Among them were some who offered
personal help; and a meeting with those of them who had, was arranged.
A 'Panel of Advisers' was recruited consisting of Lord Lothian,
member of Milner's "Kindergarten" in South Africa's reconstruction
after the Boer war and Lloyd George's personal secretary at the
Versailles Peace Conference; Lionel Curtis, also one of Lord Milner's
young men and founder of Chatham House (the Royal institute of International
Affairs); Professor Barbara Wootton, Head of Social Studies at London
University; Wickham Steed, ex-editor of the Times, and Kingsley
Martin, current editor of the New Statesman, then a required weekly
read for those politically involved.
They suggested a short 'Statement of Beliefs'
which each of them undertook to circulate among the great and the
good of their acquaintance for their signature. Any who signed it
were expressing support for a supra national rather than an international
body; but not as members of Federal Union, though their signatures
could be used in propaganda for the organisation. The wording of
the statement followed closely the wording of the official objects
of the organisation. The list of well known public figures who had
signed, when it appeared, was impressive. It was published as a
leaflet, copies of which, it is believed, are to be found in the
Federal Union archives at the LSE, together with much else.
In the meantime Gordon Square had been planting
letters in the press, both national and local, and what started
as a trickle soon developed into a flood of letters in response.
A large proportion said that 'this was just what they had been thinking'.
A very substantial number enclosed money. In reply they were advised
to do what the founders had done: arrange a meeting of likeminded
friends and form a branch. Federal Union was on its way. First just
one secretary, then a small staff supported by many young people
who volunteered their help for free. A constitution was then agreed
at a meeting of representatives of branches, providing for an elected
General council and an Executive Committee.
It seems uncertain how many joined as paid up
members. 14,000 is one figure, 60,000 another. There seems to be
general agreement, however, that there were over 200 branches up
and down the country. What is certain is that within eighteen months
of posting that original pamphlet, Federal Union had become so well-known
and had aroused so much interest, that a meeting in the old Queens
Hall, home of Sir Henry Wood's Promenade concerts (soon to be bombed
out of existence) filled all its two to three thousand seats.
In the year before Hitler finally went to war,
and during most of the following year while he was concentrating
elsewhere, Britain 'enjoyed' the 'phoney war'. Lord Lothian wrote
a pamphlet 'The Ending of Armageddon' and gave it to Federal Union
for distribution to its members. More and more branches were formed
as membership and money from them increased. Federal Union never
had one substantial backer. Other organisations were created, notably
Sir Richard Acland's New Commonwealth, backed by Edward Hulton's
Picture Post, and supportive of Federal Union. But as the months
passed the call up began to bite; more and more members got called
up for military service, membership - and contributions - began
to fall.
On the outbreak of war, Sir William Beveridge
fulfilled an undertaking that he had given Rawnsley who had been
a student at University College while Beveridge was Master. Beveridge
created a Federal Union Research Institute, with Ransome as secretary
by recruiting a number of leading figures in their fields. He formed
them into groups to discuss the effects of a European federation
on their various fields and to get one from each group to write
up its conclusions. Federal Union published the results in a series
of 'Federal Tracts'. Professors Lionel Robbins, Ivor Jennings, Barbara
Wootton, Dr C E M Joad and Lord Lugard were among the authors.
The Institute survived the war and became the
Federal Trust. The branches and the organisation as it had originated
did not. When the bombs began to fall, Federal Union in that form,
like all other voluntary organisations made up of local branches,
was among the casualties. Rawnsley had been called up and was killed
(accidentally); and Kimber resigned. R W G Mackay, later an MP,
took over, but died prematurely. The post war Federal Union which
John Pinder joined 51 years ago, inevitably, was a very different
animal from the pre-war Federal Union, founded over sixty years
ago, though it shares the name.
What, if anything, had Federal Union achieved?
The great and the good may have been ready to sign that pre-war
Statement of Beliefs without committing themselves to joining the
organisation. It was an important contribution. But it would not
have been noticed if Federal Union had not been there to initiate
and publicise it. Federal Union had made enough noise to be able
to claim, with some justification, to have brought the offer of
union with France within the 'art of the possible', (at least at
that desperate moment). But it also can claim to have put federation
at the top of the agenda of such public discussion of 'war aims'
as Churchill's insistence on 'unconditional surrender' allowed.
"Europe must federate or perish", said
Clem Attlee in 1938. With opinion in Britain now divided across
party lines, party loyalties seem too strong to allow those who
want a genuine union to get together. Unless they do, Attlee will
be proved right and Europe will remain a gaggle of little self-centred
states, each exercising its precious 'national sovereignty' by deciding
to surrender to the bribery, bullying, or flattery of an overwhelmingly
powerful American Empire.
This article was contributed by Sir Charles
Kimber, one of the original founders of Federal Union, who may be
contacted c/o info@federalunion.org.uk.
The article expresses the opinions of the author and not necessarily
those of Federal Union. First edition, November 2004.
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