《对大陆的承诺:外交部、陆军部和英国野战部队,1934-1938》

IF 0.3 3区 社会学 Q2 HISTORY
B. McKercher
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从1934年初到1938年初,向欧洲大陆派遣地面部队(野战部队)是英国大战略的一个重要组成部分。1933-1934年冬天,外交部和财政部高级官员通过国防需求小组委员会(DRC)与参谋长合作,建议内阁在1939年的最后期限前开始适度的重新武装——最终为5200万英镑。刚果民主共和国建议的核心是组建野战部队,通过对法国和低地国家的军事支持,支持英国维持欧洲的力量平衡,以阻止德国可能的侵略。在1934年2月的报告中,刚果民主共和国确定了两个需要改进英国防御的敌对大国:“最终潜在敌人”德国和重要性较低的日本。陆军部立即开始组建这支部队,由四个师组成。1935年,鉴于阿比西尼亚危机,意大利加入了潜在对手名单,内阁批准了近4亿英镑的刚果民主共和国建议,到1939年,再次增加国防开支。在外交部的指导下,政府对余额进行了监督;战争办公室的规划现在以一支16师的野战部队为中心。然而,1937年5月,内维尔·张伯伦升任首相,并启动了一项国防审查,要求增加支出——分1939年和1941年两次支出16.25亿英镑——但取消了野战军。为了避免这种平衡,英国将依靠强大的空军和海军来维护国家和帝国的安全。然而,在1939年3月德国征服捷克斯洛伐克和黑暗的大陆环境之后,野战军得以重生,以支持英国的战略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Commitment to the Continent: The Foreign Office, the War Office, and the British Field Force, 1934-1938
ABSTRACT Despatching ground forces – the Field Force – to the continent constituted a cardinal element of British grand strategy from early 1934 to early 1938. In winter 1933-1934, through the Defence Requirements Sub-Committee [DRC], senior Foreign Office and Treasury officials, working with the Chiefs of Staff, advised the Cabinet to begin moderate rearmament – ultimately £52 million – with a deadline of 1939. Central to DRC recommendations was the Field Force to underwrite British maintaining the European balance of power through military support for France and the Low Countries to deter possible German aggression. When reporting in February 1934, the DRC identified two adversary Powers requiring improved British defences: Germany, the ‘ultimate potential enemy’, and Japan, of lesser importance. The War Office immediately began creating the Force, built around four divisions. In 1935, given the Abyssinian crisis, Italy joined the list of potential adversaries, and the Cabinet approved almost £400 million DRC-recommended additional defence spending, again, by 1939. The government guided by the Foreign Office monitored the balance; and War Office planning now centred on a 16-division Field Force. However, in May 1937, Neville Chamberlain rose to the premiership and initiated a defence review requiring more spending – £1.625 billion in two tranches: 1939 and 1941 – but eliminating the Field Force. Eschewing the balance, Britain would rely on powerful air and naval forces to maintain national and imperial security. However, after Germany’s conquest of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 and a darkened continental milieu, the Field Force was reborn to underpin British strategy.
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