ليوپولد آمري


ليوپولد آمري

Leo Amery 1917.jpg
First Lord of the Admiralty
في المنصب
31 October 1922 – 28 January 1924
العاهلGeorge V
رئيس الوزراءBonar Law
Stanley Baldwin
سبقهThe Lord Lee of Fareham
خلـَفهThe Lord Chelmsford
Secretary of State for the Colonies
في المنصب
6 November 1924 – 4 June 1929
العاهلGeorge V
رئيس الوزراءStanley Baldwin
سبقهJames Henry Thomas
خلـَفهThe Lord Passfield
Secretary of State for India and Burma
في المنصب
13 May 1940 – 26 July 1945
العاهلGeorge VI
رئيس الوزراءWinston Churchill
سبقهThe Lord Zetland
خلـَفهThe Lord Pethick-Lawrence
تفاصيل شخصية
وُلِد
Leopold Charles Maurice Stennett Amery

(1873-11-22)22 نوفمبر 1873
Gorakhpur, British India
توفي16 سبتمبر 1955(1955-09-16) (aged 81)
London, United Kingdom
القوميةBritish
الحزبConservative
التعليمHarrow School
Balliol College, Oxford
All Souls College, Oxford
المهنةPolitician

Leopold Charles Maurice[1] Stennett Amery CH (22 November 1873 – 16 September 1955), usually known as Leo Amery or L. S. Amery, was a British Conservative Party politician and journalist, noted for his interest in military preparedness, British India and the British Empire and for his opposition to appeasement.

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النشأة والتعليم

وُلِد ليوپولد آمري في گراخ‌پور، الهند، لأب إنگليزي وأم يهودية مجرية. His father was Charles Frederick Amery (1833–1901), of Lustleigh, دڤون, an officer in the Indian Forestry Commission.[2] His mother Elisabeth Johanna Saphir (c. 1841–1908),[3] who was the sister of the orientalist Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner,[4] had come to India from England, where her parents had settled and converted to Protestantism. In 1877, his mother moved back to England from India, and in 1885, she divorced Charles.[2]

In 1887, Amery went to Harrow School, where he was a contemporary of Winston Churchill. Amery represented Harrow at gymnastics and held the top position in examinations for a number of years; he also won prizes and scholarships.[2]

After Harrow, he went to Balliol College, Oxford, where he performed well. He gained a First in Classical Moderations in 1894; in literae humaniores in 1896 and was proxime accessit (runner-up) to the Craven scholar in 1894 and Ouseley scholar in Turkish in 1896. He also won a half-blue in cross-country running.[2]

He was elected a fellow of All Souls College. Undoubtedly intelligent, he could speak Hindi at 3; Amery was born in India and would naturally have acquired the language of his ayah (nanny). He could converse in French, German, Italian, Bulgarian, Turkish, Serbian and Hungarian. Amery was an active freemason.[5]


Journalism

During the Second Boer War Amery was a correspondent for The Times. In 1901, in his articles on the conduct of the war, he attacked the British commander, Sir Redvers Henry Buller, which contributed to Buller's sacking. Amery was the only correspondent to visit Boer forces and was nearly captured with Churchill.[2] Amery later edited and largely wrote The Times History of the South African War (7 vol., 1899–1909).

The Boer War had exposed deficiencies in the British Army and in 1903, Amery wrote The Problem of the Army and advocated its reorganisation. In The Times he penned articles attacking free trade using the pseudonym "Tariff Reformer" and in 1906, he wrote The Fundamental Fallacies of Free Trade. Amery described it as "a theoretical blast of economic heresy" because he argued that the total volume of British trade was less important than the question of whether British trade was making up for the nation's lack of raw materials and food by exporting its surplus manufactured goods, shipping, and financial acumen.[2]

He was a member of the Coefficients dining club of social reformers, set up in 1902 by the Fabian campaigners Sidney and Beatrice Webb.

Early political career

Amery turned down the chance to be editor of The Observer in 1908 and The Times in 1912 to concentrate on politics.[2]

He narrowly failed to win the Wolverhampton East by-election, 1908, by eight votes. In the Birmingham South by-election, 1911, he was unopposed as a Liberal Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) and he would hold that seat until 1945. One reason that Amery agreed to stand there under the Liberal Unionist label (it would fully merge with the Conservative Party the following year) was that he had been a longtime political admirer of Joseph Chamberlain and was an ardent supporter of tariff reform and imperial federation. According to AJP Taylor, Amery was a rare Conservative to promote protectionism "as merely the beginning of a planned economy".[6]

الحرب العالمية الأولى و وعد بلفور

During the First World War, Amery's knowledge of Hungarian led to his employment as an Intelligence Officer in the Balkans campaign. Later, as a parliamentary under-secretary in Lloyd George's national government, he helped draft the Balfour Declaration, 1917. He also encouraged Ze'ev Jabotinsky in the formation of the Jewish Legion for the British Army in Palestine.

Amery was opposed to the Constitution of the League of Nations because he believed that the world was not equal and so the League, which granted all states equal voting rights was absurd. He instead believed that the world was tending towards larger and larger states that made up a balanced world of inherently stable units. He contrasted that idea with what he called US President Woodrow Wilson's "facile slogan of self-determination".[7]

يبدو أنني وضعت أصبعي في الكعكة، ليس فقط بكتابة إعلان بلفور، بل أيضاً في وضع أسس الجيش الإسرائيلي الراهن.

مما كتب «ليوبولد أميري» مفتخرا بماضيه في مذكراته واصفا الدور الذي لعبه في تأسيس إسرائيل.

كان المستشار السياسي لوزير الخارجية السابق أرثر بلفور، ورغم أنه كان يهوديًا لأم يهودية فإنه فضّل إخفاء هويته الدينية والدفاع عن الصهيونية من خلف الستار.

ولعل أبرز إنجازاته كتابته لمسودة الإعلان البريطاني وصياغته لوعد بلفور. بالإضافة إلى إنشائه «الفيلق اليهودي»، الذي أصبح في وقت لاحق ومرحلة لاحقة جيش الدفاع الإسرائيلي.

كما عمل من خلال موقعه كوزير للمحميات البريطانية في الفترة بين 1925 و1929 على الإشراف على ازدهار ونمو المستعمرات اليهودية في فلسطين.

مأساة عائلية

Leopold Emery had two sons, John Amery in 1912 and Julian Amery in 1919 . During World War II, his son Julian was an intelligence officer in the service of the Special Operations Manager , the British SOE, which was responsible for sabotage and special operations beyond enemy lines. He was connected, among other things, to the joining of the Palmach fighters to the conquest of Syria and Lebanon by the French Vichy forces in 1941, and after the war he was a member of the British Parliament and a friend of the State of Israel.

His eldest son John was a fascist and an avowed anti - Semite , who fought in the Spanish Civil War in the service of the Generalissimo Francisco Franco , arrived in Berlin in 1942 and began broadcasting Nazi propaganda broadcasts in English . In 1942, under the auspices of the Nazis, he established a military unit to which British prisoners of war were recruited , the declared purpose of which was to fight the Soviet Union , but the real reason for its establishment was that it would serve as a Nazi propaganda tool. The unit, which was composed of British traitors, was subsequently incorporated into Waffen SS under the name of the British Free Army. During the last months of the war, John Amery moved to Italy, broadcasting propaganda broadcasts on the radio. During the last days of the war he was captured by Italian partisans and handed over to the British. In November 1945 , John Amery was put on trial in Britain for treason, sentenced to death , and at the end of 1945 he was executed by hanging .

The affair of his betrayal and the execution of his son was not only a personal tragedy for Leopold Amery, but also a facet of Jewish delusion . Leopold Amery's father was an Englishman named Charles Frederick Amery and his mother Elisabeth Leitner was born in 1841 to a Jewish family in Budapest . The family was exiled from Hungary in 1848 following the political upheavals and revolutions in Europe that year. The family arrived in IstanbulAnd from there she moved to England. Leopold Amery hid his Jewish origins all his life, which might have damaged his status as a conservative British statesman, in the eyes of his colleagues from the British conservative establishment. He hid this fact from both of his sons, so that they would not be exposed to anti-Semitism. The second in his three private names was replaced by the name "Moritz", a European-Jewish name for the English name Maurice. In his autobiography , published shortly before his death in 1955, he wrote only that his mother was a daughter of Hungarian exiles. Son John came to the gallows as a traitor, an anti-Semite and fascist, apparently without knowing his Jewish origins.

It was only in 1999 , 44 years after the death of Leopold Amery, that a study by the Jewish historian William Rubinstein of the University of Wales was published , revealing Amery's Jewish origin.

First Lord of the Admiralty

He was First Lord of the Admiralty (1922–1924) under Bonar Law and Stanley Baldwin. The Washington Naval Conference of 1921 to 1922 resulted in the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty, which reduced the strength of the Royal Navy and the naval estimates from over £83,000,000 to £58,000,000. Amery defended the financing of the Singapore Naval Base against both Liberal and Labour attacks.[8]

Colonial Secretary

آمري أثناء زيارته لأستراليا، 1927-1928.

Amery was Colonial Secretary in Baldwin's government from 1924 to 1929. Amery expanded the role of the Commercial Adviser into the Economic and Financial Advisership under Sir George Schuster. He also created the post of Chief Medical Adviser, under Sir Thomas Stanton, and a range of advisers on education (Sir Hanns Visscher for Tropical Africa), agriculture (Sir Frank Stockdale), a Veterinary Adviser, and a Fisheries Adviser.[9] He also set up the Empire Marketing Board.[10] A favorite scheme was to develop one or more colonies into white-ruled dominions, with special attention to Southern Rhodesia, Kenya, and Palestine. The strong opposition by the overwhelming nonwhite populations in Africa, and by the Arabs in Palestine, destroyed his plans. In India, the strong resistance of the Congress movement defeated his hopes for greater integration into the Commonwealth.[11]

Out of office

Amery was not invited to join the National Government formed in 1931. He remained in Parliament but joined the boards of several prominent corporations. That was necessary as he had no independent means and had depleted his savings during the First World War and when he was a cabinet minister during the 1920s. Among his directorships were the boards of several German metal fabrication companies (representing British capital invested in the companies), the British Southern Railway, the Gloucester Wagon Company, Marks and Spencer, the famous shipbuilding firm Cammell Laird and the Trust and Loan of Canada. He was also chairman of the Iraq Currency Board.

In the course of his duties as a director of German metal fabrication companies, Amery gained a good understanding of German military potential. Adolf Hitler became alarmed at the situation and ordered a halt to non-German directors[بحاجة لمصدر]. Amery had spent a lot of time in Germany during the 1930s in connection with his work. He was not allowed to send his director's fees out of the country so he took his family on holiday in the Bavarian Alps. He had a lengthy meeting with Hitler on at least one occasion, and he met at length with Czech leader Edvard Beneš, Austrian leaders Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt von Schuschnigg and Italian leader Benito Mussolini[بحاجة لمصدر].

Later career

Opposition to appeasement of Germany

In the debates on the need for an increased effort to rearm British forces, Amery tended to focus on army affairs, with Churchill speaking more about air defence and Roger Keyes talking about naval affairs. Austen Chamberlain was, until his death, a member of the group as well. While there was no question that Churchill was the most prominent and effective, Amery's work was still significant. He was a driving force behind the creation of the Army League, a pressure group designed to keep the needs of the British Army before the public.

In the 1930s, Amery, along with Churchill, was a bitter critic of the appeasement of Germany; they often openly attacked their own party. Being a former Colonial and Dominions Secretary, he was very aware of the views of the dominions and strongly opposed returning Germany's colonies, a proposal seriously considered by Neville Chamberlain.

On the rearmament question, Amery was consistent. He advocated a higher level of expenditure, but also a reappraisal of priorities through the creation of a top-level cabinet position to develop overall defence strategy so that the increased expenditures could be spent wisely. He thought that either he or Churchill should be given the post. When a ministry for the coordination of defence was finally created under a political lightweight, Sir Thomas Inskip, he regarded it as a joke.

When war came, Amery opposed cooperation with the Soviet Union against Germany. He was a lifelong anticommunist.

When Chamberlain announced his flight to Munich to the cheers of the House, Amery was one of only four members who remained seated (the others were Churchill, Anthony Eden, and Harold Nicolson).[12]

Amery differed from Churchill in hoping throughout the 1930s to foster an alliance with fascist Italy to counter the rising strength of Nazi Germany. A united front of Britain, France, and Italy would, he felt, have prevented a German occupation of Austria, especially with Czechoslovakia's support. He thus was for appeasing Italy by tacitly conceding its claims to Ethiopia. A start was made in the so-called Stresa Front of 1935, but he felt that Britain's decision to impose economic sanctions on Italy, for invading Ethiopia in 1936, drove Italy into the arms of Germany.

Amery distrusted the administration of US President Franklin Roosevelt. He resented American pressure on Canada to oppose imperial free trade, another of his favourite schemes. While the pressure was unsuccessful as long as Canadian Conservative Prime Minister Richard Bedford Bennett was in power, after he lost the 1935 election, his Liberal successor, William Lyon Mackenzie King, adopted a more pro-American stance.


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Second World War

Amery is famous for two moments of high drama in the House of Commons, early in the Second World War. On 2 September 1939, Neville Chamberlain spoke in a Commons debate and strongly implied that he was not declaring war on Germany immediately even if it had invaded Poland. Amery was greatly angered, and Chamberlain was felt by many present to be out of touch with the temper of the British people. As Labour Party leader Clement Attlee was absent, Arthur Greenwood stood up in his place and announced that he was speaking for Labour. Amery called out to him across the floor, "Speak for England!" That strongly implied that Chamberlain was not doing so.[13]

The second incident occurred during the Norway Debate in 1940. After a string of military and naval disasters had been announced, Amery famously attacked Chamberlain's government in a devastating speech, finishing by quoting Oliver Cromwell:

You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the name of God, go![14]

Lloyd George afterwards told Amery that in 50 years, he had heard few speeches that matched his in sustained power and none with so dramatic a climax.[15] The debate led to 42 Conservative Members of Parliament voting against Chamberlain and 36 abstaining, leading to the downfall of the Conservative government and the formation of a national government under Churchill's premiership. Amery himself noted in his diary that he believed that his speech was one of his best received in the House and that he had made a difference to the outcome of the debate.

Secretary of State for India and Burma

During the war Amery was Secretary of State for India despite the fact that Churchill and Amery had long disagreed on the fate of India. Amery was disappointed not to be given a post in the Churchill war ministry, but he was determined to do all he could in the position he was offered. He was continually frustrated by Churchill's intransigence, and in his memoirs, he recorded that Churchill knew "as much of the Indian problem as George III did of the American colonies".

Last years

At the 1945 general election, Amery lost his seat to Labour's Percy Shurmer, a Post Office worker. He was offered but refused a peerage because it might, when he died, have cut short the political career of his son, Julian, in the House of Commons. However, he was made a Companion of Honour. In retirement, Amery published a three-volume autobiography My Political Life (1953–1955).

Legacy

Throughout his political career, Amery was an exponent of Imperial unity, as he saw the British Empire as a force for justice and progress in the world. He strongly supported the evolution of the dominions into independent nations bound to Britain by ties of kinship, trade, defence and a common pride in the Empire. He also supported the gradual evolution of the colonies, particularly India, to the same status, unlike Churchill, a free trader, who was less interested in the Empire as such and more in Britain itself as a great power. Amery felt that Britain itself was too weak to maintain its great power position.

Amery was very active in imperial affairs during the 1920s and 1930s. He was in charge of colonial affairs and relations with the dominions from 1924 to 1929. In the 1930s, he was a member of the Empire Industries Association and a chief organiser of the huge rally celebrating the empire at the Royal Albert Hall in 1936 marking the centenary of Joseph Chamberlain's birth. Amery maintained a very busy speaking schedule, with almost 200 engagements between 1936 and 1938, many of them devoted to imperial topics, especially Imperial Preference.

Amery wanted to keep the UK and the newly independent British Dominions united by trade behind a common tariff barrier and away from the United States. He viewed American intentions regarding the British Empire with increasingly grave suspicion. He hoped the Labour government elected in 1945 would resist promises of trade liberalisation made by Churchill to the United States during the Second World War. Amery's hopes were partially vindicated when the Attlee government, under intense American pressure, insisted upon the continuation of Imperial/Commonwealth Preference but conceded its more limited scope and promised against further expansion.

Personal life

Amery was a noted sportsman, especially famous as a mountaineer. He continued to climb well into his sixties, especially in the Swiss Alps but also in Bavaria, Austria, Yugoslavia, Italy and the Canadian Rockies, where Mount Amery is named after him. He enjoyed skiing as well. He was a member of the Alpine Club (serving as its president, 1943–1945) and of the Athenaeum and Carlton Clubs.

He was a Senior Knight Vice President of the Knights of the Round Table.[16]

On 16 November 1910, Amery married Florence Greenwood (1885–1975), daughter of the Canadian barrister John Hamar Greenwood.[17] They had two sons.

Their elder son, John Amery (1912–1945) became a Nazi sympathizer. During the Second World War he made propaganda broadcasts from Germany, and induced a few British prisoners of war to join the German-controlled British Free Corps. After the war, he was tried for treason, pleaded guilty, and was hanged. His father amended his entry in Who's Who to read "one s[on]", with the editors' permission.[18] The playwright Ronald Harwood, who explores the relationship between Leo and John Amery in his play An English Tragedy (2008), considers it significant to John Amery's story that Leo Amery had apparently concealed his partly-Jewish ancestry.

Amery's younger son, Julian Amery (1919–1996), became a Conservative politician; he served in the cabinets of Harold Macmillan and Sir Alec Douglas-Home as Minister for Aviation (1962–1964) and also held junior ministerial office under Edward Heath. He married Harold Macmillan's daughter, Catherine Macmillan.

الهامش

  1. ^ At some stage in his youth, Amery began using the name Maurice in place of his previous name Moritz. He did this so consistently that almost all sources give his name as Maurice. Rubinstein, p. 181.
  2. ^ أ ب ت ث ج ح خ Deborah Lavin, ‘Amery, Leopold Charles Maurice Stennett (1873–1955)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2011, accessed 2 June 2011.
  3. ^ Rubinstein, p. 177.
  4. ^ Elisabeth and Gottlieb's father Leopold Saphir died when they were young, and their mother married Johann Moritz Leitner. Rubinstein, p.177.
  5. ^ "Famous Freemasons". Blackpool Group of Lodges and Chapters. 10 December 2015.
  6. ^ A. J. P. Taylor (1965). English History 1914-1945. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 375.
  7. ^ Amery, Volume Two, pp. 162-163.
  8. ^ Amery, Volume Two, pp. 253-254.
  9. ^ Amery, Volume Two, p. 338.
  10. ^ Amery, Volume Two, p. 347.
  11. ^ Bernard Porter (2014). The Lion's Share: A History of British Imperialism 1850-2011. Routledge. pp. 223–42.
  12. ^ David Faber (1 September 2009). Munich, 1938: Appeasement and World War II. Simon & Schuster. p. 398. ISBN 978-1-4391-4992-8.
  13. ^ Amery, Volume Three, p. 324.
  14. ^ Amery, Volume Three, p. 365.
  15. ^ Amery, Volume Three, p. 365, n. 1.
  16. ^ Manual of the Knights of the Round Table Club. 1927.
  17. ^ "Leopold Stennett Amery; Lady Florence Amery (née Greenwood)". National Portrait Gallery, London.
  18. ^ AMERY, Rt Hon. Leopold Stennett[dead link] at Who Was Who 1997-2006 online (accessed 11 January 2008)

المراجع

  • L. S. Amery, My Political Life. Volume One: England Before the Storm. 1896-1914 (London: Hutchinson, 1953)
  • L. S. Amery, My Political Life. Volume Two: War and Peace. 1914–1929 (London: Hutchinson, 1953)
  • L. S. Amery, My Political Life. Volume Three: The Unforgiving Years. 1929–1940 (London: Hutchinson, 1955)
  • L. S. Amery, "Days of Fresh Air, Being Reminiscences of Outdoor Life" (London: Hutchinson Universal Book Club, 1940)
  • David Faber Speaking for England: Leo, Julian and John Amery: The Tragedy of a Political Family (Free Press, 2005) ISBN 0-7432-5688-3
  • Deborah Lavin, ‘Amery, Leopold Charles Maurice Stennett (1873–1955)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2011, accessed 2 June 2011
  • Nigel Nicolson (ed.), The Diaries and Letters of Harold Nicolson. Volume II: The War Years, 1939-1945 (New York: Atheneum, 1967)
  • William Rubinstein, ‘The secret of Leopold Amery’, Historical Research, vol. 73, no. 181 (June 2000), pp. 175–196

للاستزادة

  • Amery, L. S. "Imperial Defence and National Policy" . The Empire and the century. London: John Murray. pp. 174–198.
  • John Barnes and David Nicholson (eds.), The Leo Amery Diaries. 1896-1929 (London: Hutchinson, 1980)
  • John Barnes and David Nicholson (eds.), The Empire at Bay. The Leo Amery Diaries. 1929-1945 (London: Hutchinson, 1987)
  • Stephen Constantine, The Making of British Colonial Development Policy (London: Routledge, 1984)
  • David Goldsworthy, Colonial Issues in British Politics, 1945–1961 (Oxford University Press, 1971)
  • Wm Roger Louis, In the name of God, go! Leo Amery and the British empire in the age of Churchill (W. W. Norton & Co., 1992) online free
  • W. R. Louis, ‘Leo Amery and the post-war world, 1945–55’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 30 (2002), pp. 71–90
  • Philip Williamson, National Crisis and National Government: British Politics, the Economy and Empire, 1926–1932 (Cambridge University Press, 1992)

External links

پرلمان المملكة المتحدة
سبقه
Viscount Morpeth
Member of Parliament for Birmingham South
19111918
Constituency abolished
دائرة انتخابية جديدة Member of Parliament for Birmingham Sparkbrook
19181945
تبعه
Percy Shurmer
مناصب سياسية
سبقه
William Hewins
Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies
1919–1921
تبعه
Edward Wood
سبقه
The Lord Lee of Fareham
First Lord of the Admiralty
1922–1924
تبعه
The Viscount Chelmsford
سبقه
James Henry Thomas
Secretary of State for the Colonies
1924–1929
تبعه
The Lord Passfield
لقب حديث Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs
1925–1929
سبقه
The Marquess of Zetland
Secretary of State for India and Burma
1940–1945
تبعه
The Lord Pethick-Lawrence

قالب:Churchill Caretaker Ministry