Lear The Grand Strategist
Divide but not be conquered
Lear's tri-nation security plan for Britain had its modern equivalent:
Winston Churchill wrote about one of the treaties signed at the 1925
Locarno Conference:
'.....
between France and Germany, Great Britain became solemnly pledged to come to
the aid of whichever of these two States was the object of unprovoked
aggression. ..... My own view about this two-way guarantee was that while
France remained armed and Germany disarmed Germany could not attack her; and
that on the other hand France would never attack Germany if that automatically
involved Britain becoming Germany's ally. ..... The histories may be
searched in vain for a parallel to such an undertaking.'
It fell apart when Britain disarmed and France to some extent followed
suit, even though Churchill repeatedly warned that Germany was re-arming. Result: World War II.
But it could have worked if there had been courageous intervention instead of
appeasement!
Lear's strategic plan for two super-power blocs also had its modern
equivalent:
After World War II, countries gathered into super-powers blocs. The
'West' lead by USA versus Russia's 'Eastern' bloc. Despite a cold war, no 'hot'
war took place simply because both sides had too much to lose.
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