Winston Churchill Bush? Nah. Guess Again. By David Michael Green Created May 25 2007 - 10:40am George W. Bush's all-in gamble of other people's stakes in Iraq has become the mother of all disasters. Even relatively conservative members of the Washington establishment have labeled it the biggest foreign policy debacle in American history. Heck, even Henry Kissinger has consigned it to Bummerville
The Honourable Sir Winston Spencer Churchill Sir Winston Churchill, named by Time Magazine as one of the most important figures of the 20th century, was born November 30th, 1874 at Blenheim Palace, home of his grandfather John, the seventh Duke of Marlborough. Winston was the elder son of Lord Randolph Churchill and Lady Randolph Churchill (Jennie Jerome), daughter of American millionaire
Thank you for posting this "H". I've long considered Churchill to be nothing more than a war-mongering, drunken sot. "HHW" <coaster132000@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:f64c40e8-e47e-44db-9c90-91839806e244@c65g2000hsa.googlegroups.com... On Jul 5, 5:29 pm, HHW <coaster132...@yahoo.com> wrote: On Jul 4, 11:38 pm, DoD <danskisan...@gmail.com> wrote: Clip It was an understandable
On Jul 5, 5:29 pm, HHW <coaster132...@yahoo.com> wrote: On Jul 4, 11:38 pm, DoD <danskisan...@gmail.com> wrote: Clip It was an understandable decision, and one that surely Gen. Curtis LeMay concurred in, as LeMay had boasted at war’s end, “We scorched and boiled and baked to death more people in Tokyo that night of March 9-10 than went up in vapor in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined
(Host) Our guest, Dr. Arthur Prittle of Princeton, is the author of The War That Never Came N1, a study of transAtlantic diplomacy in the twentieth century, published by Lansky and Sons. (Guest) Thanks for having me. (Host) The title of your book refers to the anticipation that there would be a second great War in Europe because there had not been a proper conclusion to the Great War