“The French regarded this as a betrayal. It was. They spoke of being cheated by their wartime allies. They were. Clemenceau whose outspoken sympathies for Britain and America (he had been a newspaper correspondent in the United States shortly after the Civil War, had learned American English and married an American) had earned charges from the Right before the war that he was an Anglo-Saxon "tool", was embittered and disillusioned. As the Premier who had pulled France together in the closing period of the war, he realized what so many Frenchmen tended to forget, that without British and American help the war could not in the end have been won. He saw too that without Anglo-American promises of military aid in the future it would be beyond France's power to repel the next German invasion. He had been promised that aid in return for giving up the security of the Rhine, which his generals had demanded. Now France had neither.”
The Collapse of the Third Republic (1969)
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William L. Shirer 35
American journalist 1904–1993Related quotes

1910s, Address to the Knights of Columbus (1915)

Page 281
2000s, Promises to Keep (2008)

1968 https://www.lewrockwell.com/1970/01/murray-n-rothbard/cold-war-myths/

[On the Trail of the Assassins (New York: Sheridan Square Press, 1988)]

Speech in the public baths of Caledonian Road, Islington, London (12 December 1900) against the Boer War, quoted in The Times (13 December 1900), p. 10.
1900s

“He had learned self-control in a hard school. He had been married for thirty years.”
Source: The Silver Spike (1989), Chapter 26 (p. 528)