Andrew Roberts
Andrew Roberts (1963–) is a British neoconservative millitary historian, biographer and political pundit. A notorious chickenhawk and a Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher fanboy, Roberts started as a Trotskyist,[2] but is today, according to himself "extremely right-wing".[3]
Parroting squawkbox Pundits |
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And a dirty dozen more |
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“”In the face of a danger that the left, the Church of England, much of the establishment, the press and the French denied really existed, a lone voice told the truth unashamedly again and again until events forced the rest of the nation to listen. This brave politician faced public obloquy and collapsing political popularity, until he was proved right, when he became the most popular prime minister in recent memory. For Churchill, this apotheosis came in 1940; for Tony Blair, it will come when Iraq is successfully invaded and hundreds of weapons of mass destruction are unearthed from where they have been hidden by Saddam's henchmen. |
—Andrew Roberts, on the Tony Blair's role during the invasion of Iraq in 2003[1] |
The good
The best thing about Andrew Roberts is his books, and most of them were praised even from left-wing sources. Roberts has written many doorstop books that were (overall) well received, even if they had their dose of controversy. It should be noticed that, despite writing informative, well-researched books that usually have more than 100 pages of references alone, Roberts doesn't even try to hide his fanboyism about some historical figures and events, and due to his partiality one should read them with a grain of salt.
Historical books and research
Roberts wrote many books, convering especially (but not only) military history. In 2008, The Economist gave him the title of the "title of Britain's finest contemporary military historian", only two years after an extra extra harsh critique over one of his books (more on that later), listing his Masters and Commanders: The Military Geniuses Who Led the West to Victory in World War II among the greatest books of that year. [4]
In 2009, Roberts published his most known work, The Storm of War, which accounts for the whole history of the Second World War. Roberts main interest was to find out the reasons why Nazi Germany lost the war, and if they could have won it. In his view, Germany had a clear advantage at the beginning of the War, but Corporal Hitler made many blunders, not only not in the strategic department; for example dismissing most of his generals. Hitler should have handled his allies differently. For instance, instead of declaring war against the United States (his greatest mistake along with theOperation Barbarossa
“”The real reason why Hitler lost the Second World War was exactly the same one that caused him to unleash it in the first place: he was a Nazi. |
Biographies
Roberts started his career as a writer with a Lord Halifaxhagiographies biographies about Napoleon and Winston Churchill. His Napoleon's bio reaches almost one thousand pages, the Churchill one reaches 1,200. Both received lots of praise and won lots of prizes, with The New York Times and The Times
The bad
Iraq War
Despite writing many good books, Roberts' career as a political pundit is, however, less than stellar, with many polemics especially during the 2000's. He strongly endorsed the Iraq War in 2003 believing that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. When the invading forces failed to find these weapons, Roberts didn't change his mind, saying that "George Bush's (a fan of his) visceral responses to the attacks of a fascistic, totalitarian death cult will be seen as having been substantially the right ones... Iraq has been a victory for the US-led coalition".[7] Roberts even suggested to Bush that he should adopt a "mass internment" of Iraqis during the war. [8], suggesting that even the American ex-president holds more respect for the human rights than Roberts.
Springbok Club controversy
Roberts was once friends with the Springbok Club
A History of the English-Speaking Peoples since 1900
At least one of his books, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples since 1900, published in 2006, became especially controversial, to say the least. A spiritual sequel of Winston Churchill's A History of the English-Speaking Peoples
Transforming a critical review in praise
A relatively rare scathing review on his The Storm of War came from the British historian and his Cambridge fellow Richard J. Evans
See also
Niall Ferguson, another conservative Briton..
References
- Blast from the past
- Andrew Roberts: The history man who loves to party
- Johann Hari: The dark side of Andrew Roberts
- Pick of the pile
- Is This the Best One-Volume Biography of Churchill Yet Written?
- Review: Churchill: Walking with Destiny by Andrew Roberts — the best biography of Winston ever written
- Andrew Roberts: The history man who loves to party
- Beck Turns To The Fringe To Validate His “Crazy Conspiracy Theory”
- Johann Hari: The dark side of Andrew Roberts
- Everyone's perfidious, bar Albion and America
- Going out in the midday sun
- The case for defence
- Happy is who speaks English
- Is Andrew Roberts really an inadequate historian?
- The Storm Of War