1940-1949 | Backing repressive regimes | Churchill's crimes | Civilians slaughtered | Greece

28 civilians shot dead in Athens by British armed Nazi collaborators

3 December 1944 Winston Churchill’s legendary qualities of courage and defiance are often celebrated. It is taken for granted that he was motivated primarily by a moral repugnance to Nazism. If so, it’s difficult to understand his decision in 1944 to release around 12,000 Nazi collaborators from the prisons in Athens and have them uniformed…

1920-1939 | Churchill's crimes

Churchill recommends strafing crowds of Irish nationalists

24 September 1920 On 24 September 1920, Secretary of State for Air Winston Churchill urged the Chiefs of Staff to seriously consider the use of fighter aircraft against gatherings suspected of protesting or plotting against British rule. In Churchill’s view, strafing attacks would be ‘a great deterrent to illegal drilling and rebel gatherings.’1 General Sir…

1860-1899 | Burning crops | Burning villages | Churchill's crimes | Collective punishments | Punitive operations | Starvation campaigns

Winston Churchill participates in a punitive operation, destroying an entire valley of villages

15 September 1897 On 15 September 1897, Lieutenant Winston S. Churchill, who was temporarily freelancing as a war correspondent, joined a punitive British military expedition, under Major General Sir Bindon Blood, as it began to move against the Mamunds of the Watelai Valley on India’s North West Frontier. The provocation had been an attack the…

1940-1949 | Antisemitism | Churchill's crimes | Deportation

Churchill anxious to achieve faster deportation of Jewish refugees

3 June 1940 On 3 June 1940, Winston Churchill wrote a minute to the Cabinet Secretary asking anxiously: ‘Has anything been done about shipping 20,000 internees to Newfoundland or St. Helena ?’ Churchill added, ‘I should like to get them on the high seas as soon as possible.’1 Within weeks of the start of the…

1920-1939 | Chemical weapons | Churchill's crimes

Churchill backs gas warfare to preserve the Empire

3 May 1920 On 3 May 1920, Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill wrote a covering letter of support to a Cabinet memorandum by the Chief of the Imperial Staff, Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, on gas warfare. Churchill declared that he was ‘in entire agreement with the views put forward by Sir Henry…

1940-1949 | Churchill's crimes | India

Churchill – Hindus are a ‘foul race’ – wishes he could bomb them

23 February 1945 On 23 February 1945, Winston Churchill, having only days earlier approved the saturation bombing of the German city of Dresden which killed tens of thousands of civilians, now expressed a wish that a similar fate could be inflicted on Indian cities. According to the diary records of his Downing Street secretary John Colville,…

1940-1949 | Churchill's crimes | Italy

Churchill refuses to consider urgent food aid for Italy

13 February 1945 On 13 February 1945, during the closing weeks of the Second World War,  Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander was attending a lavish lunch on board the luxurious ocean liner SS Franconia with Prime Minister Winston Churchill and a few senior government officials. As his fellow diners gorged themselves on the extravagant spread,…

1920-1939 | Antisemitism | Churchill's crimes | Racism

Churchill blames the Bolshevik terror in Russia and Europe on jews

8 February 1920 On 8 February 1920, writing in the Illustrated Sunday Herald, Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill alleged that Jews could neatly be divided into ‘good and bad Jews.’ On the one hand, the ‘honourable’ Zionist and also ‘national Jews,’ who were loyal to their home countries, and on the other, the far…

1940-1949 | Divide and rule | India

Churchill – Hindu-Muslim feud ‘the bulwark of British rule in India’

2 February 1940 On 2 February 1940, during discussions in Cabinet, Winston Churchill, as First Lord of the Admiralty, strongly defended the status-quo in British India, blocking a proposal which would have allowed the subcontinent to draw up its own constitution once the war ended. He expressed shock when it was suggested that Hindus and…

1920-1939 | Churchill's crimes | India

Churchill – ‘Primitive millions of India’ must remain under British rule

2 February 1931 Speaking to a crowd in Liverpool on 2 February 1931, Winston Churchill expressed his fear and indignation that Britain might ‘loose’ India. ‘Would France,’ he asked rhetorically, ‘be cheated out of Syria or Indo-China ? Would the United States be hustled out of the Philippines ? All these countries asserted themselves and…