Leaders | From the archive

For the Right

|

IN the last issue of The Economist we were able to carry the chronicle of great events up to the German 16-point "offer" broadcast to the world on Thursday night. It was suggested at the time that the "offer" was a piece of propaganda, since it had only been communicated to Poland two hours before it was declared by Berlin to have been rejected.* What could not be known when this comment was penned in the small hours of Friday morning was that even the British Government itself had had no knowledge of the "terms" save such as could be gathered by the Ambassador from a gabbled recital in German by the excited Ribbentrop. Nor was there then any possibility of knowing that Hitler had given his army and his air force orders to attack Poland at dawn, without further excuse or formal declaration of war.

More from Leaders

Germany’s failure to lead the EU is becoming a problem

A weak chancellor and coalition rows are to blame

How to ensure Africa is not left behind by the AI revolution

Weak digital infrastructure is holding the continent back


A global gold rush is changing sport

Fans may be cooling on the Olympics, but elsewhere technology is transforming how sport is watched


Can Kamala Harris win?

Joe Biden’s vice-president has an extraordinary opportunity. But she also has a mountain to climb

MAGA Republicans are wrong to seek a cheaper dollar

It is hard to cast America as a victim of the global financial system

Joe Biden has given Democrats a second chance to win the White House

If they are not to squander it, they must have a proper contest