5147007
9783631535707
The history of Anglo-Czechoslovak relations during the Second World War has generated much controversy over the past sixty years. This book examines Britain's relationship with the Czechoslovak emigres based in London, led by Edvard Benes, from the Foreign Office's perspective. Using a wide range of materials, the author provides a rigorously post-Cold War analysis of British decision-making and policy formation on the Czechoslovak question between 1938 and 1945. He gives detailed consideration to tripartite relations with the Polish Government in exile, the Soviet Union, and the anti-fascist Sudeten German refugees in London led by Wenzel Jaksch. He also examines the British Government's attempts to promote resistance in Nazi-occupied Europe, as well as the gradual evolution of proposals to remove the Sudeten German minority forcibly from Czechoslovakia after the war.Martin David Brown is the author of 'Dealing with Democrats: The British Foreign Office and the Czechoslovak migrs in Great Britain, 1939 to 1945 (Mitteleuropa - Osteuropa Oldenburger ... Zur Kultur Und Geschichte Ostmitteleuropas)', published 2006 under ISBN 9783631535707 and ISBN 3631535708.
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