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War, Empire and the Attlee Government 1945–1951
     Release time: 2018-09-09

 

 

John Newsinger

 

Abstract

In this article, adapted from a speech delivered at a conference on reparative history, the author challenges the dominant view of the progressive radicalism of the postwar Attlee government by exposing the brutality of its imperial adventures. Examining British involvement in Vietnam, Indonesia, Greece, Malaya, Kenya, India, Palestine, Iran and Korea, the piece paints a very different and bloody historical narrative from the dominant one. It argues that the welfare state was accompanied by the creation of the warfare state and that it was the Labour Party which cemented the ‘special relationship’ with the United States, which today the vast majority of the parliamentary Labour Party would still like to see hold sway in terms of foreign policy and questionable foreign interventions.

 

Keywords

Attlee government, colonial policy, imperialism, Indian Independence, Labour Party, special relationship, warfare state

 

From: Race & Class 2018 60 (1)

Editor: Wang Yi

 

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