Charmley sums up his feelings about Winston Churchill in : Charmley has also tried to rehabilitate Neville Chamberlain. F. M. Leventhal, in a review of Chamberlain and the Lost Peace, suggested that while Charmley's work portrayed a courageous leader with "a deep and humane desire to leave no stone unturned to avoid war," Chamberlain's inability to recognise Hitler's ambition meant that "perhaps that is why Winston Churchill's reputation remains largely untarnished, while Chamberlain's, Charmley's initiative notwithstanding, cannot be resuscitated".
Criticism
Some historians find Charmley's view of the situation of Britain in the Second World War implausible at best. Many historians argue that it is difficult to blame the fall of the British Empire on Churchill, as it was exceedingly likely to fall anyway. Scholars also find the idea of a truce with Germany unwise at best, as Richard M. Langworth wrote: A more general critique of the idea of making peace with Germany comes from Manfred Weidhorn: Military historianCorrelli Barnett calls it "absurd... that instead of going to war Britain could, and should, have lived with Wilhelmine Germany's domination of western Europe. This is glibly clever but actually preposterous as his claim... that Britain could and should have unilaterally withdrawn into neutrality in 1940–41"
John Charmley, A History of Conservative Politics 1900–1996..
John Charmley, Splendid Isolation?: Britain and the Balance of Power 1874–1914..
John Charmley, "Chamberlain, Churchill and the End of Empire" in The Declineof Empires...
John Charmley, "Palmerston: Artful Old Dodger or Babe of Grace?" in The Makers of British Foreign Policy from Pitt to Thatcher...
John Charmley, "What if Halifax Had Become Prime Minister in 1940?" in Prime Minister Portillo and Other Things that Never Happened: A Collection of Political Counterfactuals...
John Charmley, The Princess and the Politicians: Sex, Intrigue and Diplomacy, 1812–40..
John Charmley, A History of Conservative Politics since 1830...
John Charmley, "Unravelling Silk: Princess Lieven, Metternich and Castlereagh" in A Living Anachronism? European Diplomacy and the Habsburg Monarchy.. pp. 15–29..
John Charmley, "Neville Chamberlain and the Consequences of the Churchillian Hegemony" in Origins of the Second World War: An International Perspective.. p. 448..