Allies at war How the struggles between the Allied powers shaped the war and the world

Tim Bouverie, 1987-

Book - 2025

"A fascinating look at the complex relationships between the Allied powers-far more fraught than we understood-- that defined the course of World War II and the world beyond, from critically acclaimed author of Appeasement Tim Bouverie's Winning the War offers a ground-breaking exploration of the complex relations between the Allied powers during World War II. Far from the lockstep agreement depicted in popular culture or the cozy "special relationship" of the United States and Britain today, Bouverie shows how the wartime alliance was at every turn threatened by mistrust, rivalry, hypocrisy, and deceit, as well as how all the allies, from the very start of the war, were intensely focused on the world that would emerge o...nce hostilities had ceased. At the center of the book is the relationship between the three principal Allies-the British Empire, the Soviet Union and the United States. Beginning with the brief Anglo-French Alliance of 1939-1940 and the tragic consequences of its disintegration, Bouverie follows Britain's desperate quest to acquire allies following the fall of France, and then the functioning of the Grand Alliance after the United States and the Soviet Union joined in 1941. Though the alliance was dominated by the major powers, Bouverie also shows the powerful impact of smaller countries on the course of the war-of the twenty neutral European states at the outbreak of fighting, only six managed to stay out of the war. Featuring a remarkable cast of characters that goes beyond the so-called "Big Three"-Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Josef Stalin-to the lieutenants and diplomats whose advice was at turns welcomed and rejected, Winning the War offers a remarkable 360 degree view of this tumultuous period. Drawing on sixty-five private archives in Britain and the United States-several of which have never before been accessed by historians-, Bouverie reveals an untold story at the heart of World War II, one that had a profound shape on the world to come"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Crown [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Tim Bouverie, 1987- (author)
Edition
First US edition
Physical Description
xv, 654 pages, 16 leaves of plates ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 541-632) and index.
ISBN
9780593138366
  • Preface
  • Part 1. The Anglo-French Alliance, 1939-1940
  • 1. Allies
  • 2. The Scandinavian Fiasco
  • 3. The Fall
  • 4. Unfriendly Fire
  • 5. Rebels with a Cause
  • Part 2. Seeking Allies, 1940-1941
  • 6. The Battle for America
  • 7. The Reluctant Neutral
  • 8. Friend or Foe?
  • 9. Greek Tragedy
  • 10. Desert War
  • 11. Fighting France
  • 12. The Soviet Enigma
  • 13. Allied with Hell
  • 14. "In God's Good Time"
  • 15. Atlantic Meeting-Pacific Infamy
  • Part 3. The Grand Alliance, 1942-1943
  • 16. Forging the Alliance
  • 17. The Rising Sun
  • 18. Fronts and Frontiers
  • 19. The Flickering Torch
  • 20. Casablanca
  • 21. Special Relationship
  • 22. Stress and Strain
  • 23. The Big Three
  • Part 4. Toward Victory, 1944-1945
  • 24. The Fourth Policeman
  • 25. Turncoats and Partisans
  • 26. Brave New World
  • 27. The Polish Agony
  • 28. Spheres of Influence
  • 29. Yalta
  • 30. Triumph and Tragedy
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Sources and Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Bouverie (Appeasement, 2019) offers readers drama, intrigue, and mordant wit as he recounts "the politics and diplomacy of the incongruous alliance that ultimately defeated Hitler." With vivid writing and diligent research--hobbled by confusingly microscopic asterisks to footnotes--Bouverie examines the alliances and rivalries of all Allied and neutral nations during WWII, going beyond the UK, the U.S., and the Soviet Union. While Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin have been extensively quoted, career diplomats are rarely heard from in WWII histories. Bouverie quotes American diplomats Adolf Berle and William Bullitt, whose insights about Russian objectives offer perspective on President Putin's covert and open aggression from Norway to Ukraine. Bouverie writes nail-biting descriptions of battles in Africa and the Middle East that, had the Allies lost, could have changed the war's course. He also devotes attention to imperialism, colonialism, and European racism. The Allies misunderstood and lied to each other, miscalculated, and flip-flopped. Nevertheless, Bouverie's wit and eloquence prove Churchill's observation--and the book's epigraph--"There is only one thing worse than fighting with allies and that is fighting without them."

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Reexamining the "incongruous alliance" that defeated the Nazis. British historian Bouverie writes that World War II's first two years were a pure contest between good and evil, with Stalin's USSR happy to support Hitler. Having declared war when Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, the Allies proceeded to dither until Germany attacked the following spring. The Allied rout after May 1940 crushed morale. Defeatism overwhelmed the French and exerted a powerful influence on its ally because Hitler made it clear that he wanted a peaceful settlement with Britain. It's not unlikely that, without Churchill, this would have happened. Ignoring historians' feel-good preoccupation with the Battle of Britain, Bouverie concentrates on that nation's disappointment on the battlefield and maddening experience with other great powers. Franklin D. Roosevelt's early support was largely verbal. Selling arms and food for cash soon bankrupted Britain, and Lend-Lease started slowly (the iconic 50 aged destroyers were little help). Charles de Gaulle infuriated both Roosevelt and Churchill. Stalin did not grow less obnoxious as an ally. The Allies' victory came at a painful price that included plenty of frustration at the top. Churchill was a nationalist and imperialist, willing to sacrifice morality if it benefited his nation. A great insight is his assumption that Stalin held identical views. This proved more accurate than FDR's conviction that he faced a political boss amenable to the charm and favors that worked so well in America. Readers may gnash their teeth at the democracies' weakness in the face of Stalin's ruthlessness but console themselves knowing that the USSR was, ultimately, the big loser. Fascinating history of a time that is fading from living memory. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.