Churchill's Empire: The World That Made Him and the World He Made (54 page)

BOOK: Churchill's Empire: The World That Made Him and the World He Made
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Churchill may have felt some reservations about developments in Kenya, but he never said so openly. He did, however, seize the chance to advocate mercy when it could be justified in terms of policy. This opportunity presented itself with the capture of General China. China had served with the King’s African Rifles during World War II, but afterwards became disillusioned with the lack of prospects for ex-servicemen in Kenya. In 1950 he took a Mau Mau oath and not only oathed others in turn but killed those regarded as traitors to the cause. When the emergency was declared he and a small band of followers had already sought refuge from the police in the Mount Kenya forest. As the numbers of forest fighters grew – he eventually commanded four thousand of them – he played a key role in attacks on European farms and on the loyalist Kikuyu Home Guard. In January 1954 his luck ran out when he was wounded in a battle with the security forces. Expecting to die of his injuries, he gave himself up. His capture was a major intelligence coup for the British, as he provided crucial information on the numbers and disposition of the Mau Mau forces to his interrogator, Assistant Superintendent Ian Henderson, who managed to win his trust. Within little more than a fortnight he was tried and sentenced to death. He would have been hanged, as so many others were, but Henderson was convinced that he would be more useful alive, and that he might even be able to help broker a surrender pact with the Mount Kenya armies.
182
The hope of a large-scale capitulation was the background to the British Cabinet’s discussions of China’s fate.

In the background too was Churchill’s concern about press attacks regarding the use of the death penalty in the fight against Mau Mau. On 10 February Churchill told his colleagues that there was much in the criticisms. Executions, he said, should ‘serve a public service’, the implication being that sometimes a greater good could be served by giving a reprieve.
183
According to the formal minutes of the meeting he said that Baring, in considering whether or not to reprieve China, ‘should give due weight’ to the fact that it was now being claimed on his behalf that he had given himself up in response to the amnesty that already had been offered to fighters who surrendered. That claim was untrue. However, Churchill asked, ‘In view of the importance of convincing Mau Mau supporters generally of the reliability of this offer, might it not be advantageous to exercise clemency in General China’s case, even though the Government did not in fact accept his claim to have surrendered under the terms of the amnesty?’ The minutes also record Lyttelton’s reply: ‘he was in full agreement with the Governor’s view that commutation of the sentence would have a deplorable effect in Kenya, particularly among the Government’s Kikuyu supporters’.
184
The Cabinet Secretary’s notebook upon which the minutes are based record a franker exchange. Churchill spoke critically of ‘Execution of men who fight to defend their native land’ to which Lyttelton replied ‘But this is armed rebellion.’
185
At this stage the balance of opinion was to let the execution go ahead.

However, by the following week Baring had changed his tune, and cabled London to say that it seemed possible that China could negotiate the surrender of gangs not only in his own area but in Kenya as a whole. Under these conditions, commutation of his sentence was desirable. Taking a firmer line against the settlers than was his wont, he said that the violent criticism that this was likely to produce should be ignored.
186
Churchill raised the issue again in Cabinet, and said that once negotiations had been opened with China on the basis proposed he should not be hanged even if the talks broke down: ‘you can’t bargain with a man under sentence of death and hang him if he doesn’t come across’. Lyttelton said that he still disapproved of the whole thing, but that he would leave the decision to Baring. It was possible that only a few fighters would lay down their arms: ‘He will get a bad bargain if only a few come across & you have to let him [China] off.’
187
However, even Lyttelton came round once he had arrived in Kenya himself on a tour of inspection.
188
China’s reprieve was announced on 4 March.
189
Settler leader Michael Blundell declared, ‘The record of “General China” was one of murder, butchery, and arson, and from what has happened one could only conclude that the hallmark of the Government was expediency, and that they had no principles at all.’
190

Blundell’s own visit to Churchill in Downing Street took place that December. The parley conducted via General China with other rebel leaders had not led to large-scale surrenders, in part because a detachment of the King’s African Rifles had attacked a group who were waiting to give themselves up. It looked as if British promises could not be trusted.
191
Nevertheless, the Mau Mau were now on the back foot militarily. This did not put an end to Churchill’s desire for negotiations; again and again he urged Blundell to find someone to do a deal with. ‘I’m sure that you need negotiation’, he insisted, asking repeatedly if there was any possible partner: ‘You must find someone to negotiate with. I’d like to come and do it myself.’ He also spoke of ‘the bad odour that the shootings, the brutalities and the detention camps gave to Britain in the world’.
192
Churchill’s last significant contribution on Mau Mau occurred early in 1955. The government promulgated a new amnesty for all crimes committed by both sides prior to January that year. This has been viewed as a very one-sided offer. Although spared the death penalty, surrendering fighters would be subject to indefinite detention, whereas loyalists who had committed atrocities would get off scot free.
193
In Cabinet, Churchill raised a similar objection, saying it was a pity to confuse the surrender offer with the withdrawal of proceedings against loyalists. Alan Lennox-Boyd, who had replaced Lyttelton as Colonial Secretary, replied that it would be impossible to defend the first without the second. Kikuyu Home Guard members would desert and the settlers would be affronted. Churchill returned to the point, asking if it would not be enough merely to suspend proceedings against loyalists until it was clear whether or not there had been a general Mau Mau surrender. Lennox-Boyd again rebuffed him, saying that it could not be allowed to appear that the fate of loyalists depended on the success of the surrender appeal.
194

There was to be no end to the rebellion before Churchill left office in 1955. The bulk of the fighting was over by 1957, although the formal State of Emergency continued until 1960. In sum, it is true that, as Prime Minister at the head of the whole system, Churchill presided over some appalling abuses committed by the imperial regime, but he did not actively will them. In fact, he showed signs of being troubled by them and made some efforts to prevent them. It is worth remembering that as a young and vigorous Colonial Office minister in the Edwardian era he had railed against similar abuses, on a smaller scale, often without being able to do much to stop them. His failure to do so now can in part be explained by the fact that he was growing increasingly decrepit and had many other questions to deal with. His sense of the urgency of colonial issues at this time is hinted at by his response to Lennox-Boyd’s request for a new Colonial Office building. All that was needed, Churchill thought, was a suite of rooms with ‘a large sitting room, a fine kitchen and dining room’.
195
His remaining energies were spent mainly on problems of Cold War politics, and although his occasional fits of interest in Kenya were largely benign, only a more concentrated effort could have made a real difference.

VII

Churchill’s final months in power formed an inglorious end to a great career. Colonial policy was not much to the fore. After Stalin’s death in 1953 he had sought a summit meeting with the new Soviet leaders. He clearly hoped that, if he brought a thaw to the Cold War, he could then retire in a blaze of glory. Nehru endorsed the summit idea warmly, telling the Indian parliament that ‘fear-laden humanity will bless those who will rid it of these terrible burdens and lead it to peace and happiness’.
196
Churchill’s pursuit of a rapprochement with the Russians was a way of trying to prove that Britain – positioned at the point of overlap of the ‘three circles’ – could still be a key player. However, the idea was not viewed warmly by the Americans or even by Churchill’s own colleagues, and it died a prolonged death. In July 1954, in an attempt to sidetrack him from it, Eisenhower suggested to Churchill that his hope for ‘a fitting climax’ to his career could be satisfied by other means. Colonialism, the President wrote to him, was ‘on the way out as a relationship between peoples’. Churchill should make a speech on this: ‘If you could say that twenty-five years from now, every last one of the colonies (excepting military bases) should have been offered a right to self-government and determination, you would electrify the world.’
197
In a caustic reply, Churchill denied, implausibly, that he was ‘looking about for the means of making a dramatic exit or of finding a suitable Curtain’. Furthermore:

I read with great interest all that you have written me about what is called Colonialism, namely: bringing forward backward races and opening up the jungles. I was brought up to feel proud of much that we had done. Certainly, in India, with all its history, religion and ancient forms of despotic rule, Britain has a story to tell which will look quite well against the background of the coming hundred years.
    As a matter of fact the sentiments and ideas which your letter expresses are in full accord with the policy now being pursued in all the Colonies of the British Empire. In this I must admit I am a laggard. I am a bit sceptical about universal suffrage for the Hottentots even if refined by proportional representation. The British and American Democracies were slowly and painfully forged and even they are not perfect yet. I shall certainly have to choose another topic for my swan song: I think I will stick to the old one ‘The Unity of the English-speaking peoples.’ With that all will work out well.
198

Churchill continued to hang on in office, driving his ministers to distraction by his refusal to set a firm date for his departure. Harold Macmillan, exaggerating somewhat, said that Churchill’s ‘almost child-like determination to get his way at all costs and regardless of other results must be, partly at any rate, a result of his mental illness’.
199
Eden, of course, was the chief sufferer. According to Oscar Nemon, the Prime Minister would sit gazing into space and mumbling half-aloud, ‘Those hungry eyes. Those hungry eyes! I really should resign. One cannot expect Anthony to live forever.’
200
Churchill-admirer Nirad C. Chaudhuri saw him in the Commons in what was one of his final appearances as Prime Minister. ‘He looked very much like his figure on a Toby jug, but was much more rosy, white-haired, and child-like than I could have imagined him to be’, Chaudhuri wrote. ‘It was surprising how successfully he had divested himself of all atmosphere, of all suggestion of being not only a writer, historian, and political thinker, but also a statesman and war leader.’ He later added that he had intended these words in a complimentary sense, saying that he saw Churchill as ‘an English incarnation of one of the early heroes of Rome, Cincinnatus’, a model of virtuous simplicity.
201

Churchill finally stood down in April 1955. Leo Amery, even now keeping an eye on events, wrote, ‘It cannot be said that he has been a great Prime Minister this last time,’ but thought that he would ‘always live by his war leadership’ and by his great post-war speeches.
202
(By the end of the year Amery himself had succumbed to old age, earning a tribute from Churchill as ‘above all, a great patriot.’)
203
The evening before his formal resignation, the soon-to-be-ex-Prime Minister played host to Queen Elizabeth at a dinner party at No. 10. In proposing a toast to Her Majesty, Churchill said, ‘Madam, I should like to express the deep and lively sense of gratitude which we and all your peoples feel to you and to His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh for all the help and inspiration we receive in our daily lives and which spreads with ever-growing strength throughout the British Realm and the Commonwealth and Empire.’
204
The news of his retirement made headlines throughout the world, but not in London; Fleet Street was in the throes of a newspaper strike. There were some critical voices on the left. F. A. Ridley, writing in the
Socialist Leader
(which was unaffected by the strike), poured scorn upon Churchill: ‘He tried to hold Ireland by force, and it is now an independent republic; he helped to conquer South Africa, and it is now treading the republican road; he assisted to garrison Egypt, and he himself had to sign the agreement abandoning the Suez Canal. An unbroken record of disaster!’
205
In France,
l’Humanité
made a similar point: ‘all his life, Churchill has fought against the emancipation of the colonial peoples, and these today have risen up against their oppressors; all his life, Churchill has sought to defend the privileges of British capitalism, and this has led him ultimately to mortgage his country’s national independence to American imperialism.’
206
However, a perhaps more authentic note of popular feeling was struck by the Gold Coast’s
Daily Graphic
. It observed that Churchill still liked to be controversial, but it added that ‘the years have mellowed old antagonisms and he is regarded now with affection and respect by everyone, even those who opposed his policies most bitterly’.
207
In this, the paper surely spoke for many throughout the now all-but-liquidated Empire.

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