ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE ALLY: HAROLD MACMILLAN AND CHARLES DE GAULLE
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About This Book
"On 14 January 1963, General de Gaulle (described by the Foreign Office as an 'almost impossible ally') brutally vetoed Britain's first bid to join the Common Market. It was a blow that delayed Britain's entry for a decade and hastened the end of Harold Macmillan's political career." "Pater Mangold writes about the personal duel that shaped high politics and Anglo-French diplomacy. He portrays two of the most complex and skilful leaders of the post-war era, old friends from their association in Algiers during World War II: de Gaulle the dour, lofty moralist obsessed with high notions of France; and Macmillan, the canny, ambitious fixer, always the pragmatist seeking to get things done."
"The Almost Impossible Ally is a story of friendship turned sour, and of a compelling new episode in the turbulent relations between Britain and France."--Jacket.
"The Almost Impossible Ally is a story of friendship turned sour, and of a compelling new episode in the turbulent relations between Britain and France."--Jacket.
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