Authors: John Masters
That debate of the 8th was Carson's doing ⦠and Carson's also the decision to press it to a division after Bonar Law had warned him that the government would consider it a vote of confidence; and a narrow squeak it had been, with only 73 Conservatives voting for the Coalition government â of which they were a part â out of 286 in the House. That debate, and the division, had aroused intense feelings far beyond the House. It might have been some foreign country, not England, so bitter were the expressions being used inside and outside Parliament.
The honourable and gallant member for Sunderland, Colonel Sir H. Greenwood, was on his feet:
⦠it must have a Minister who does not want any advice other than he can get from his own officials, and who is prepared to come to this House, and face the fire with his own decisions, and, as the hon. Member has just said, take the gallows if he fails and a peerage, possibly, if he succeeds. (Laughter)
A voice:
A peerage if he fails! (Renewed laughter)
The plain fact was, Harry thought, that a sharp split had developed in the Cabinet, and in the country, which transcended party affiliations. The split was over the war, and its conduct. The battle was being waged not only in this Palace of Westminster, but in every private house, club, and pub in the Kingdom: and it had been brought about through the machinations of Alfred Harmsworth, Lord Northcliffe, the owner of the biggest newspaper chain in the world â the Amalgamated Press. Northcliffe thought that the war was being waged unskilfully, weakly, and without determination. Many parliamentarians agreed with him, notably Sir Edward Carson, the Ulster fire-eater; Winston Churchill, another fire-eater; and even David Lloyd George, the Minister of War since Kitchener's death.
Dr Macnamara said that in view of the feeling of the House that there should be a Pensions Minister, the Admiralty felt bound to withdraw its request for exclusion. It accepted, without reserve, the full authority and control of the new Minister â¦
The amendment was therefore withdrawn. The clause, as amended, was agreed to.
The clock above the Chair indicated a quarter to nine in the evening. Harry's stomach was rumbling ominously. He rose, bowed to the Chairman, and left the Chamber.
In the House dining room he sat down at a small table by himself. A waiter glided up at once and he ordered a pair of lamb chops with vegetables, and a half bottle of Beaujolais. When the food was brought, and he began to eat, a shadow fell across his plate and he looked up. Winston Churchill was standing beside him, beaming down, a glass of brandy in hand. He said, âDid I ever tell you I met your son, when I was in exile in France, Rowland?'
âQuentin,' Harry said, âHe did mention in a letter that he had met you.' He waited. It was obvious that Churchill was paying attention to him, an insignificant backbencher, because every vote would count in the coming struggle for power. Like most conservative-thinking people, of all parties, he had felt a deep distrust for Churchill, but this war had changed many things, including one's point of view. If Churchill had mismanaged the Dardanelles expedition â which no one could yet say for certain â he had certainly shown an offensive spirit; and he had courage, brains, and determination, which was much more than one could say of most politicians.
Churchill said, âNot long afterward, my battalion was disbanded â lack of manpower â and I found myself once more in these halls of discord ⦠Mind if I join you for a few moments?'
Harry gestured to the other chair â âIf you don't mind my eating. These chops are excellent, but there's nothing worse than congealed lamb fat.'
âMind if I light up?' Harry shook his head, his mouth full. Churhill opened his cigar case and selected a long, fat Havana. As he lit and began to draw on the cigar he said, âI suppose you know that affairs here will come to a head at any moment?'
Harry said cautiously, âWhat affairs, Churchill?'
âIn the government ⦠regarding the Prime Minister's position ⦠It's been a bad year for the country. Jutland ⦠it was a strategic victory, all right, but Jellicoe didn't destroy the German fleet and that was what the country was expecting. The Somme ⦠do you know what the total casualty figures were, from July 1st to November 1st, when Haig declared the offensive ended? Four hundred and fifty thousand! The people are appalled. You know how deep and mournful an impression those casualty lists have on one â those endless columns of fine black print, the realization that each of those names, packed like sardines on the page, represents someone's father, brother, lover, husband. It would be different if we could show some great, decisive result. We would accept the losses then. We could raise our heads, and let our tears crown their triumph ⦠But what in fact do we have to show? A few square miles of scarred and poisoned earth!'
Harry said slowly, âYours is one point of view. I suppose you think Asquith should go. Northcliffe certainly does.'
âFor purely patriotic reasons,' Churchill interjected.
âPerhaps ⦠But I am not sure that I can accept the vicious attacks that his newspapers have made on the Prime Minister over the Somme offensive, and other matters connected with running the war.'
Churchill said, âSince Northcliffe owns
The Times
, with its great authority, and the
Daily Mail
with its enormous circulation, he is a very formidable enemy ⦠Yet Mr Asquith does have two powerful weapons at his disposal, which I and others have long been urging him to use. The first is the secret session of the House. Then Members could learn the truth of affairs, instead of gleaning what they can from, on the one hand, the jejune communiqués of the generals and admirals, and on the other, the insidious and hostile suggestions of Lord Northcliffe ⦠but Mr Asquith will not hear of it. Why, I do not know.'
He drew deep on his cigar, and swallowed some brandy with evident satisfaction. Harry said, âAnd the other weapon?'
Churchill said, âHe has the power to requisition a newspaper â any newspaper â and turn it into the official mouthpiece of the government, the State Monitor, if you will. He could seize
The Times
for that purpose tomorrow, and so strike that weapon from Northcliffe's hands. But I fear, sir, though Mr Asquith has been my friend and colleague for a long time, that his metal is not tempered for war. He is a man of peace.'
And you are not, Harry thought to himself: you, and Carson, the man calling for open rebellion in Ulster, and Lloyd George, who had taken on the whole House of Lords, and beaten them. He said, âAbout the Somme ⦠isn't it true that the French â¦'
âAh, Rowland, I know what you are going to say,' Churchill cried, stabbing the air with his cigar â âthat we had to save the French from disaster by attracting German forces away from Verdun. That is true, as a strategic fact ⦠but did it need to be done by
these
means, which amounted to wholesale slaughter of
our
men rather than theirs? Sixty thousand men lost on the first day! Figures that stagger the mind, chill the soul!'
Harry swallowed the last of his meat and, wiping his
mouth, said, âI suppose Haig could find no better way.'
âAnd we can find no better general, apparently,' Churchill said, suddenly gloomy. âBut we must! Rowland, it is the soldiers we have to think of, and they are now no more than the expression in uniform of the people of these islands ⦠they have grudged no sacrifice, however unfruitful, and shrunk from no ordeal, however destructive ⦠struggling forward through the mire and filth of the trenches across the corpse-strewn crater fields amid the flaring, crashing, blasting barrages and murderous machine-gun fire, conscious of their race, proud of their cause, they seized the most formidable soldiery in Europe by the throat, and slew them, and hurled them unceasingly backward ⦠No attack, however forlorn, however fatal, found them without ardour. No slaughter, however devastating, prevented them from returning to the charge. No physical conditions however severe deprived their commanders of their obedience and loyalty. They were unconquerable, except by death â which they have conquered. They have set up a monument of native virtue which will command the wonder, the reverence, and the gratitude of our island people as long as we endure as a nation among men.'
Harry, staring mesmerized into Churchill's face, so close, saw tears welling in the other's eyes; and as a tear ran down his own cheek and splashed onto his plate, he realized that he too was weeping.
Churchill's voice was hoarse, âRowland, we must not let those men down. The conduct of the war must be put into other, stronger, more ruthless hands. We have no higher duty, no stronger loyalty, than to put control of the war into the hands of those who will bring victory. May we count on your support?'
Harry thought, he means, will I stab Asquith, my leader, in the back, if I am asked to by the conspirators â Carson, Lloyd George, Churchill himself?
He said, âI don't know, Churchill.'
âThink, Rowland!' Churchill said, getting up, waving the cigar. âThink of the consequences if this nation loses the war, through inept direction ⦠Think.' He nodded and walked away between the tables, pausing to mutter a word here, pat a shoulder there ⦠mostly backbenchers, Harry noted. The offensive was under way.
Alfred Charles William Harmsworth, first Baron Northcliffe of the Isle of Thanet, had a heavy face with a big nose, high cheekbones, bags under his eyes, and a wide cruel mouth â a strong face. He was sitting at the head of the long dining room table in his house in St James's Place. Eleven Members of Parliament sat at the table with him â seven Liberals, of the Prime Minister's party; and four Conservatives, unwilling allies in the Coalition Government. All four Conservatives had voted against the government in the Great Palm Kernel debate. The table had been cleared of everything but the cut glass decanters of port, madeira, and sherry. A cigar box, clipper, and lighter in the shape of a flaming grenade were being passed round from hand to hand. The servants who had attended the lavish dinner had left the room. The Members and the Press lord were alone.
Northcliffe was expansive â hands waving or thumping the table â pausing now and then to sip his port: âWe're going to form a Committee to run the war ⦠Lloyd George, Bonar Law, and Carson ⦠Asquith can stay as Prime Minister â but he'll have nothing to do with controlling the war. The Committee will do that.'
A Member on Harry's right, a man he didn't ever remember seeing before, said, âWhat will the P.M. have to do, then?'
Northcliffe waved a hand â âSupervision of political affairs ⦠general control over the Committee, unless they outvote him.'
The Member shook his head: he was tall and bald, and sounded like a lawyer â âI don't see how Asquith can accept it. If the Committee is to run the war without his real control, then he is Prime Minister in name only. For of course all wars are political as well as military.'
Northcliffe's baggy eyes wandered over the speaker. He said, âYou have given me the clue, the answer to our problem. Bonar Law tells me that in his opinion Asquith will accept the Committee in principle, but make it clear that he must exercise control ⦠which can mean anything he chooses to make it mean. That is what we do not want ⦠it would be fatal for the country. Perhaps we need a forceful leader in
The Times
, accepting the Committee idea as the right one, since of course it means that the Prime Minister has, quite properly, been deprived of all control of the conduct of the war â¦'
Another M.P. broke in, âAsquith will take umbrage, and refuse to accept the Committee.'
Northcliffe smiled wickedly, âAny man with a spark of self respect would do so.'
âAnd then you will be in a position to bring the rebellion into the open?'
Northcliffe nodded and poured himself another glass of port. He said, âIf we are to topple Asquith â and if we don't we shall lose the war, I insist you understand that â we must not make out the recent great offensive on the Somme to be more of a victory than it was. I have given orders to all correspondents and writers for my papers â and of course the leader writers above all â that the Army's casualties shall receive more notice than its advances, though the latter are not to be denied â¦
if
they really occurred. The people must not be allowed to believe that Asquith has, in any sense, however remote, been the architect of a great victory in France.'
Harry felt unhappy. He stared at Northcliffe, who was now animatedly talking to the M.P. opposite him. What did that mean â take more notice of casualties than advances? In plain fact it meant manipulating the news for a political purpose ⦠but was that any different from manipulating it for a national purpose, as had certainly been done early in the war ⦠to influence American opinion, to prevent disheartenment, to deny the enemy useful information?
When Northcliffe looked up from his conversation, Harry said, âDon't we risk causing the Army to lose heart that way?'
Northcliffe smiled winningly, âI agree with you, Rowland, but what I am advocating is the Army's own policy! Charteris told me and Sir Douglas emphasized it, the last time I was over at G.H.Q. â that they don't want optimistic or favourable reports published. If they are, the people will think everything is going well, the Army has everything it needs. But the Army wants to paint itself as always lacking for essentials, especially men, machine guns, shells, and now the new machines, the tanks â¦'
âThat is better than the early days,' another M.P. said, âwhen you knew â or soon learned from men coming back on leave â that the official communiqués were much too rosy, if not complete lies.'
Northcliffe said, âThat hasn't ended. Asquith has been
labelling every little advance a great victory ⦠We must break up soon, gentlemen. I am returning to France the day after tomorrow, and I hope that I â I hope that
England
â may count on your support when the time comes.' He rose, dramatically raising his glass â âI give you a toastâ¦'