This collection of essays makes a major contribution to the growing
debate on British foreign policy before the First World War, and
mounts a sustained critique of the received interpretation that
invites comparison with the work of Fritz Fischer on the foreign
policy of Imperial Germany. The Policy of the Entente presents a
realistic assessment of British priorities in the years before
1914, and considers the fundamental and conflicting pressures that
determined the formulation of foreign policy. The author concludes
that British policy, far from being increasingly Eurocentric, was
emphatically imperial: indeed many of the difficulties faced by
Britain's rulers stemmed from their inability to live up to this
Imperial self-image.
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