Winston Churchill emerges as a statesman who interpreted Britain’s conflicts as a defence of Western civilisation. Deeply shaped by navalism and imperial thought, he saw sea power, empire, and the Anglo-American alliance as pillars of global stability. Though marked by controversial strategies and operational failures, his leadership during the critical years of 1940–41 sustained British resistance when defeat seemed imminent. Churchill’s vision extended beyond war, anticipating the ideological struggle with Soviet expansion and contributing to the conceptual foundations of the postwar Western order. His enduring legacy resides not only in victory, but in preserving the political and moral continuity of the West.
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Jeremy Black
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Jeremy Black (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a67f12f353c071a6f0aedd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.13125/pan-6959